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El. knyga: Counter-Radicalisation: Critical Perspectives

Edited by (Nottingham Trent University, UK), Edited by (University of Warwick, UK), Edited by (University of Wales Swansea, UK)

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This book offers a wide-ranging and critical examination of recent counter-radicalisation policies, using case studies from several countries.

Counter-radicalisation policies, such as the UK Prevent strategy, have been highly controversial and increasingly criticised since their introduction. In this edited volume, voices from disciplines including sociology, political science, criminology and International Relations are brought together to address issues across the global roll-out of counter-radicalisation agendas. In so doing, the book critically interrogates: (i) the connections between counter-radicalisation and other governmental programmes and priorities relating to integration and community cohesion; (ii) the questionable dependence of counter-radicalisation initiatives on discourses and assumptions about race, risk and vulnerability to extremism; and, (iii) the limitations of existing counter-radicalisation machineries for addressing relatively new types of extremism including amongst right-wing activists.

Through examining these questions, the book draws on a range of contemporary case studies spanning from counter-radicalisation in the UK, Germany and Denmark, through to detailed analyses of specific preventative initiatives in Australia and the United States. Conceptually, the chapters engage with a range of critical approaches, including discourse theory, autoethnography and governmentality.

This book will be of much interest to students of radicalisation, critical terrorism studies, counter-terrorism, sociology, security studies and IR in general.

Recenzijos

'The strong side of the book is its bringing together of Critical Terrorism Studies and Radicalization studies. When we look at the literature, state-centric publishing plays the dominant role. In Counter-Radicalisation, authors preferred a human-centric analysis.' Hakan Kyc, Turkish National Police Academy Insights Turkey, Summer 2018

Notes on contributors ix
Acknowledgements xiv
Introduction 1(13)
Charlotte Heath-Kelly
Christopher Baker-Beall
Lee Jarvis
1 Radicalisation: the journey of a concept
14(22)
Arun Kundnani
2 Prevent and Community Cohesion in Britain: the worst of all possible worlds?
36(18)
Paul Thomas
3 How (not) to create ex-terrorists: Prevent as ideological warfare
54(17)
Phil Edwards
4 Countering violent extremism: social harmony, community resilience and the potential of counter-narratives in the Australian context
71(17)
Anne Aly
5 Prevent abroad: militant democracy, right-wing extremism and the prevention of Islamic extremism in Berlin
88(18)
Julia Berczyk
Floris Vermeulen
6 Recognition masking response: preventing far-right extremism and radicalisation
106(17)
Michelle Bentley
7 Challenging far-right extremism: the other side of the coin?
123(16)
Rocio Cifuentes
8 Mapping the Muslim community: the politics of counter-radicalisation in Britain
139(17)
Nadya Ali
9 Policed multiculturalism? The impact of counter-terrorism and counter-radicalization and the `end' of multiculturalism
156(19)
Francesco Ragazzi
10 Prevent and the internet
175(15)
Lella Nouri
Andrew Whiting
11 Challenging the separation of counter-terrorism and community cohesion in Prevent: the potential threat of the `radicalised' subject
190(16)
Thomas Martin
12 Prevent 2011 and counter-radicalisation: what is de-radicalisation?
206(17)
Mohammed Elshimi
13 Refocusing Danish counter-radicalisation efforts: an analysis of the (problematic) logic and practice of individual de-radicalisation interventions
223(19)
Lasse Lindekilde
Index 242
Christopher Baker-Beall is Lecturer in International Relations at Nottingham Trent University.

Charlotte Heath-Kelly is postdoctoral fellow with the Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick. Her most recent book is Politics of Violence: Militancy, International Politics, Killing in the name (Routledge, 2013).

Lee Jarvis is Senior Lecturer in International Security at the University of East Anglia. His books include Terrorism a Critical Introduction (2011) and Times of Terror: Discourse, Temporality and the War on Terror (2009).