Index

Radicalization and Counter-Radicalization

ISBN: 978-1-83982-989-5, eISBN: 978-1-83982-988-8

ISSN: 1521-6136

Publication date: 9 September 2020

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2020), "Index ", Silva, D.M.D. and Deflem, M. (Ed.) Radicalization and Counter-Radicalization (Sociology of Crime, Law and Deviance, Vol. 25), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 000-000. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1521-613620200000025016

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes.

Adherence Checklist for the Evaluation and Reduction of Risk (ACERR)
, 57

Against Violent Extremism (AVE)
, 218

Agency
, 231–235

al-Dawla al-Islamiya fil Iraq wa al-Sham (see Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL))

al Qaeda (see also 9/11 attack)
, 186, 246–247

al-Shabbah
, 186

Algerian Front de Libération Nationale (FLN)
, 103

Anarchist wave in terrorism
, 101–102

Anti-colonial groups
, 108

Anti-colonialist wave in terrorism
, 102–103

Appearance in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 195

Attitudinal inoculation
, 156, 158–160

against extremist beliefs and attitudes
, 164–165

Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR)
, 84

Behavioral radicalization
, 25–26, 31, 249

Belief in Canadian national mythology
, 267–269

Bias in risk assessment
, 58–60

Birmingham City Council (BCC)
, 84

British “Prevent” program
, 226

Building Resilience Against Terrorism
, 120

Building Resilience Against Violence and Extremism (BRAVE)
, 147–148

Building Stronger Britain Together program
, 82

Caliphate (see Islamic State (IS))

Campaign of resistance
, 109

Canadian multiculturalism
, 265

Canadian Research Network on Terrorism, Security and Society (TSAS)
, 260

Canadian Security and Intelligence Services (CSIS)
, 121, 125, 248

Case Conceptualization Coding Rating Scale (CCCRS)
, 57

Case Formulation Content Coding Method (CFCCM)
, 57

Case Formulation Quality Checklist (CFQC)
, 57

Catastrophic Syrian civil war
, 12

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
, 247, 254n1

Centralization and Conceptual and Operational Expansion
, 80–82

CFQC-R
, 57

Channel program
, 226

Chechen groups
, 187

Child criminal exploitation (CCE)
, 148

Children’s Act
, 138

Civic integration turn
, 87–88

Civic integrationist turn
, 78

Closed Circuit Television (CCTV)
, 84

Cognitive extremist
, 25–26

Cognitive openings
, 251

Cognitive radicalization
, 22, 25–26, 30, 249

Combatting Terrorism Center
, 42

Commitment
, 231–235

Communicative learning
, 39

Communities
, 123

Security Practices and Construction of Suspect
, 124–125

Comparative-historical analysis
, 96, 99–100

Complacency
, 250

Computer-Assisted-Telephone Interviewing (CATI)
, 60–61

ConnectFutures
, 137, 143, 146

Contemporary radicalization
, 41, 43

Content development
, 163–165

Content identification to comprise disinformation inoculation treatment
, 161–162

CONTEST Counter Terrorism strategy
, 78, 81–83

Contextual safeguarding approach and radicalization
, 141–143

Controversial “preventive prosecutions”
, 246

Correctional Officers (COs)
, 262, 264, 269–272

Counter extremism
, 78

agenda
, 82–83

program
, 136

2015 Counter-Extremism Strategy
, 85–86

Counter Terrorism and Border Security Act (CTSA)
, 82

Counter-radicalization
, 2–3, 78, 226–227

civic integration turn
, 87–88

contours in Canada
, 116–117

policies
, 116

prevent as contested practice
, 88–90

securitizing civil society through
, 119–122

UK’s Prevent strategy
, 78–83

Counter-terrorism (see also Terrorism)
, 1, 23–24

Countering violent extremism (CVE)
, 1–2, 24, 27, 136, 218

approaches to
, 143–146

contextual safeguarding approach and radicalization
, 141–143

safeguarding and Terrorism law
, 137

safeguarding framework
, 138–141

understanding intersections
, 146–149

Critical thinking
, 145

CrowdFlower (CF)
, 62

Crusaders
, 105

Cultural defense
, 251

Cultural imperialism
, 251

Cyberhate (see Online extremism)

Dabiq
, 198

Daesh (see Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL))

Damaging behavior, disrupting
, 143–146

Definitions favorable to violating the law
, 170, 173

Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG)
, 78, 82

Department for Education (DfE)
, 80, 84

Deradicalization (see also Radicalization)
, 11, 13–15, 22, 28, 210, 215, 248–253

programs
, 11, 15–17

Desist and Disengage Programme
, 81

Desistance
, 246

Deviant definitions
, 171

Differential association
, 171, 173

Differential location in social structure
, 169, 171, 174

Differential social location
, 169, 171–172, 174

Differential social organization
, 169

Differentially associating
, 172

Differentially reward
, 172

Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure
, 247

Discrete-choice modeling
, 56

Disengagement
, 15, 28, 215–216, 253

Disinformation inoculation treatment
, 161–162

Distance-decay
, 56

effect
, 65

Diversity of terrorism
, 106–107

Dynata
, 172

Education Funding Agency (EFA)
, 84

Emancipation
, 38

Emancipatory learning
, 39

Engagement
, 246, 249, 253

Entrepreneur
, 251

22 ERG principles
, 229

ETA
, 104

Evaluations of deradicalization programs
, 16

Extremism (see also Violent extremism)
, 22, 24, 27, 56, 85, 125, 136, 148

violent vs. non-violent
, 26–27

women and
, 185–188

Extremist entryism
, 85

Extremist precursors
, 211–213

Extremist violence
, 214

radicalization toward
, 213–215

False positive rates
, 59

Family in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 194–195

Far-right extremists
, 217

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
, 168

Former combatants

on involvement vs. non-involvement
, 235–236

narrating motivations
, 228–229

Former extremists
, 210–211

combating violent extremism
, 218–220

extremist precursors
, 211–213

leaving violent extremism
, 215–218

radicalization toward extremist violence
, 213–215

“4P’s”
, 139

Frame alignment
, 251

Free-space
, 213

Front de Liberation du Quebec (FLQ)
, 48

Fundamental British values
, 80

Fundamental British values
, 87–89

Gay bashings
, 214

Grievance, state violence as
, 107–108

Grievance-based explanations of terrorism
, 97

Group dynamics
, 251

Hadiths
, 194

Hamas
, 186

Harm principle
, 23, 28–30

applying
, 30–32

Healthy Identity Intervention Program
, 10

Hindustan Republican Association (HRA)
, 103

Hyper-compliance
, 86

Ideology of terrorism
, 11

Ideology of Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 191–193

Imitation
, 172–174

Inciting incident, state violence as
, 107–108

Indian Nationalists
, 103

Individual psycho-cognitive processes
, 44

Informants
, 245

Inoculation (see also Attitudinal inoculation)

to combat disinformation by VEOs
, 161

and psychological reactance
, 160

and source credibility
, 160

theory
, 158–159

Integrated National Security Enforcement Team (INSET)
, 248

Integration
, 78

Intent factors
, 233–235

Intentions and commitment
, 234

International Center for Study of Radicalization (ICSR)
, 260

Internet
, 184

savviness of Jihadi-Salafist and White Nationalist organizations
, 185

Internet
, 214

Intersections
, 146–149

Intuition
, 236–238

Irish Republican Army (IRA)
, 102

Islamic State (IS)
, 12, 40–41, 261

online propaganda of
, 105–106

Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
, 41, 43, 121

qualitative examination of ISIS propaganda
, 100–101

Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) (see Islamic State (IS))

Islamic State women-only forums

method
, 190–191

women and extremism
, 185–188

Women Dawah
, 189–190

Women’s Forum
, 188–189

Islamist extremism
, 22

Jihadi internet
, 252

Jihadi-Salafist
, 185

groups
, 187–188

ideology
, 193

movements
, 187, 200

Jihadists
, 217

Justification of violence
, 251

Knowing danger and risk
, 235

Ku Klux Klan
, 188

Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA)
, 190

Leaderless jihad
, 252

Life After Hate
, 218

Linguistic approaches
, 63–64

LIWC software
, 63

Local infrastructure
, 66

Locally Driven Community Engagement Approach
, 78–80

Macro-level factors
, 214

Manosphere
, 158

Meaning perspective, transformation of
, 44

Meaning Perspectives Transformation theory
, 38, 40

Mechanical Turk (MTurk)
, 62

Message targeting
, 162–163

Methodological individualism
, 231

Militancy in West
, 41–43

Mill’s harm principle
, 3

Mixed-methods approach
, 99

Motivations
, 231

former combatants narrating
, 228–229

Prevent’s conceptualization for violence
, 229–231

Multi-pronged approach
, 179–180

Multiculturalism, support for
, 267–269

Muscular liberal
, 78

Muslim civil society organizations (Muslim CSOs)
, 116–117

experiencing securitization
, 122–127

strategies to manage securitization
, 126–127

Muslims
, 47, 59, 80

citizenship and inclusion
, 78

communities
, 116, 125

community engagement
, 80

prevent in public sector
, 86–87

schooling British Muslims
, 84–86

and urban governance
, 83–84

National Centre for Teaching and Leadership (NCTL)
, 84–85

National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START)
, 43, 260

National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM)
, 124

National Indicator 35 (NI35)
, 79

National security
, 118–121, 123–125

National Security Community Outreach Program (NSCOP)
, 121

National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC)
, 138

National Union of Teachers (NUT)
, 89

New left wave in terrorism
, 104–105

9/11 attack (see also al Qaeda)
, 41, 116, 260

Non-Muslims
, 47

Non-violent extremism (see also Violent extremism)
, 26–27, 31, 136

Non-violent radicalization
, 249

Northern Ireland
, 226–227

Northern Ireland-related “extremism”
, 226

Odds Ratio (OR)
, 175

Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism (OSCT)
, 226

Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services and Skills (OFSTED)
, 147

“One to One” pilot project
, 219

Online communities
, 184

Online extremism
, 168

discussion
, 177–179

limitations
, 179

measures
, 172–175

methods
, 172

results
, 175–176

SSSL and production of online hate materials
, 169–172

SSSL theory
, 168–169

Online hate (see Online extremism)

Online surveys
, 62–63

Open Society Justice Initiative
, 89

2016 Orlando nightclub shooting
, 260

P/CVE initiatives
, 220

Paris attacks
, 260

Paris Commune
, 101, 104

“Pizzagate” incident
, 156–157, 164–165

Political and cultural democracy
, 39

Political empowerment
, 38

Political Islam
, 47

Political violence
, 38, 40, 44, 47–48

Politiets Efterretningstjeneste
, 247

Poor cue utilization
, 58

Positive reinforcement
, 171, 173

“Positive” emancipation
, 40

Practitioners
, 136–144, 146

Pregnancy
, 193–194

Preliminary empirical exploration
, 46–48

Prevent
, 120, 226–227

agency
, 231–235

conceptualization of motivations for violence
, 229–231

as contested practice
, 88–90

counter extremism and Muslims
, 83–87

from countering radicalization to countering extremism
, 78–83

former combatants narrating motivations
, 228–229

former combatants on involvement vs. non-involvement
, 235–236

knowing danger and risk
, 235

operating through speculation and intuition
, 236–238

PREVENT agenda
, 137, 139–140

2007 Prevent agenda
, 83

Prevent Duty Guidance
, 89

2011 Prevent Strategy
, 82

Preventing violent extremism (PVE)
, 1–2, 218

Prison radicalization
, 260

Prison subcultures
, 265–267

research
, 265

Pro-integration
, 218

Pro-Integration Model (PIM)
, 217–218

Prolific
, 62

Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA)
, 245

Psychological reactance, inoculation and
, 160

Public Safety Canada (PSC)
, 117

Push factors
, 211–212

Qualitative methods
, 96

R package
, 191

Radical Muslim
, 125

Radicalization (see also Deradicalization)
, 1–3, 22, 38, 64, 125–126, 210, 248–253, 261–262

impact of “top–down” framing
, 125–126

cognitive vs. behavioral
, 25–26

contextual safeguarding approach and
, 141–143

investigation
, 24

responses to
, 24

toward extremist violence
, 213–215

Radicalization Awareness Network (RAN)
, 42

Rational actor theories
, 98

Recidivism
, 15

Red Army Faction (RAF)
, 48, 104

Redirect Method
, 218–219

Refutational preemption
, 164

Relationships in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 196

Religion in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 199–200

Religiosity
, 47

Repression
, 96

Reversing
, 15

Revolt
, 246, 250, 253

Rightwing extremism
, 170

Risk assessment

linguistic approaches
, 63–64

processes
, 57–58

spatial analyses
, 65–67

using surveys to develop risk factors
, 60–63

thinking about Bias in
, 58–60

Risk-terrain modeling (RTM)
, 56, 66

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)
, 117, 121–123, 127, 248

Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC)
, 245

Safeguarding
, 137–138

framework
, 138–141

Safer Birmingham Partnership (SBP)
, 83

“Salafi-jihadism”
, 246

“Salafi-jihadist” ideology
, 246

Scholarship on radicalization
, 2–3

Secret Intelligence Service (MI6)
, 247

Securitization of Muslim CSOs in Canada
, 116–119

through counter-radicalization
, 119–122

CSO strategies to manage securitization
, 126–127

experiencing
, 122–127

Security discourse
, 124, 126

Security Service (MI5)
, 247

“Signs of radicalization”
, 229

Snowball sampling
, 263

Social epidemic
, 250

Social justice and reform
, 38

Social networks
, 212

Social structural variables
, 177

Social Structure Social Learning theory (SSSL theory) theory
, 168–169, 177

and production of online hate materials
, 169–172

Source credibility, inoculation and
, 160

Sousveillance
, 86

Sovereign Citizens
, 264, 270

Spatial analyses
, 65–67

Speculation
, 236–238

Spiritual Islam
, 47

State intervention
, 22

State violence
, 96–97

comparative-historical analysis
, 99–100

as grievance and inciting incident
, 107–108

mixed-methods approach
, 99

qualitative examination of ISIS propaganda
, 100–101

symbolic importance of
, 108–109

and terrorism
, 97

theories and terrorism
, 97–99

State–CSO “partnerships” for national security
, 124

Stormfront
, 185, 188

Strategic disinformation
, 157–158

attitudinal inoculation
, 158–159

development of content
, 163–165

identification of content to comprise disinformation inoculation treatment
, 161–162

inoculation and psychological reactance
, 160

inoculation and source credibility
, 160

using inoculation to combat disinformation by VEOs
, 161

message targeting
, 162–163

Structured Professional Judgement risk assessment process
, 57

Superiority
, 47

Symbolism of multiculturalism
, 125

Tablighi Jamaat
, 247

Tamil separatists
, 217

Task Force on Tackling Radicalization and Extremism (TERFOR)
, 80–81

Technical learning
, 39

Telegram
, 189

Telephone surveys
, 60–62

Territorial stigmatization
, 84

Terrorism
, 1, 11, 38, 40, 56

academic and public interest
, 260

anarchist wave
, 101–102

anti-colonialist wave
, 102–103

diversity of
, 106–107

law
, 137

new left wave
, 104–105

online propaganda of Islamic State
, 105–106

state violence and
, 97–99

Terrorism Act 2000
, 138

Terrorism studies
, 22

cognitive vs. behavioral radicalization
, 25–26

violent vs. non-violent extremism
, 26–27

Terrorists
, 65

campaigns
, 11

disengagement
, 13, 16

terrorists-turned-informants
, 244

Theoretically defined variables
, 169

Theoretically relevant variable
, 174

Threat elicitation
, 163

“Top–down” framing
, 125–126

Totalizing commitment
, 213

Transformative learning theory (TL theory)
, 38–40

Transformative radicalization (TR)
, 38, 40

learning to be violent
, 44–46

preliminary empirical exploration
, 46–48

violent radicalization and militancy in West
, 41–43

Trauma
, 58

Trigger events
, 45

Trojan Horse plot
, 84–86

“Troubles, the” in Northern Ireland
, 226, 233

UK CONTEST 3.0
, 136

“Ulsterization” policy
, 245

Ummah
, 251

Uncertainty
, 22

Univariate Statistics
, 175

Urban governance, Muslims and
, 83–84

Violence

personal experiences of
, 229

Prevent’s conceptualization of motivations for
, 229–231

in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 197–198

Violent extremism (see also Extremism; Non-violent extremism)
, 16–17, 26–27, 31, 56–57, 148

combating
, 218–220

leaving
, 215–218

Violent extremist ideology
, 120

Violent extremist organizations (VEOs)
, 157

using inoculation to combat disinformation by
, 161

Violent radicalization
, 40–43, 45, 249

Virtual extremism (see Online extremism)

Vulnerability
, 231–235

War on Terror
, 116

Weight-based approach
, 63

Western military intervention
, 250

White Nationalist
, 187–188

organizations
, 185

women-only forums
, 184–185

Women

and extremism
, 185–188

in Women’s Forum and Women Dawah
, 198–199

Women Dawah
, 185, 189–190, 190–192

appearance
, 195

family
, 194–195

forum rules
, 196–197

ideology
, 191–193

pregnancy
, 193–194

relationships
, 196

religion
, 199–200

violence
, 197–198

women
, 198–199

“Women’s Cause, The” (see Women Dawah)

“Women’s Fight, The” (see Women Dawah)

Women’s Forum, The
, 188–190, 192–193

appearance
, 195

family
, 194–195

forum rules
, 196–197

ideology
, 191–193

pregnancy
, 193–194

relationships
, 196

religion
, 199–200

violence
, 197–198

women
, 198–199

Youth violence, preventing
, 146–149

Prelims
Introduction: Deciphering (Counter-)Radicalization
Part I: Theoretical and Conceptual Advances
Chapter 1: Does Deradicalization Work?
Chapter 2: Navigating Radicalization Concepts: A Role for the Harm Principle
Chapter 3: Radicalization as Transformative Learning: A Theoretical and Illustrative Exploration
Chapter 4: Advances in Violent Extremist Risk Analysis
Part II: State and Civil Society
Chapter 5: Counter-Radicalization as Civic Integration
Chapter 6: The Role of State Violence in the Adoption of Terrorism
Chapter 7: The Securitization of Muslim Civil Society in Canada
Chapter 8: Countering Violent Extremism, Safeguarding and the Law: A Practitoner’s Perspective on Protecting Young and Vulnerable People from Exploitation
Part III: The Online Space and Radicalization
Chapter 9: Clearing the Smoke and Breaking the Mirrors: Using Attitudinal Inoculation to Challenge Online Disinformation by Extremists
Chapter 10: Learning to Hate: Explaining Participation in Online Extremism
Chapter 11: Hatred She Wrote: A Comparative Topic Analysis of Extreme Right and Islamic State Women-Only Forums
Part IV: Former Extremists, Prevention, and Punishment
Chapter 12: Former Extremists in Radicalization and Counter-Radicalization Research
Chapter 13: Examining “Prevent” from a Former Combatant Perspective
Chapter 14: Engagement, Desistance, and Revolt: What Do We Know about Terrorists Who Turn into Informants?
Chapter 15: “We Wouldn’t Let Known Terrorists Live Here”: Impediments to Radicalization in Western Canadian Prisons
Index