Results 181 to 190 of about 1,002 (219)
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The Routledge Handbook on Radicalisation and Countering Radicalisation
2023Busher, Joel +2 more
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Radicalisation and mental health
Nordic Journal of Psychiatry, 2018Although radicalisation is invoked to explain how people become terrorists, there is little empirical evidence.To set out the approaches to understand radicalisation, ethical and definitional issues, and how public health approaches may help.A non-systematic narrative review.Radicalisation is proposed to explain how people become terrorists.
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Abstract Radicalization has become an important part of the twenty-first-century security and political landscape. It is a seemingly ubiquitous term, employed by academics, policymakers, civil society actors, practitioners, and media alike, in ever-expanding ways—describing everything from changing domestic social movements to the growth
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Radicalisation and de-radicalisation of social movements: The comeback of political Islam?
Crime, Law and Social Change, 2013Forty years after Mathiesen wrote the ‘politics of abolition’ his work can enhance our understanding about radicalisation and de-radicalisation of social movements and terrorist groups. In ‘the politics of abolition’ Mathiesen explains the mechanism of two social factors that moderate the most contested goals and means of abolitionists groups.
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Understanding youth radicalisation: an analysis of Australian data
Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression, 2022Adrian Cherney, Emma Belton
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Genderising Radicalisation: Forms and Pathways of Radicalisation from a Perspective of Gender
This chapter explores the intersection of gender and radicalisation, analysing how gender dynamics influence pathways into extremism. While radicalisation studies have traditionally focused on male-dominated narratives, emerging research highlights the active roles of women in extremist movements, both in jihadist and far-right contexts.Anna Maria Leonora +3 more
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