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Edges of Radicalization - Individuals, Networks and Ideas in Violent Extremism (Paperback)
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Edges of Radicalization - Individuals, Networks and Ideas in Violent Extremism (Paperback)
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Loot Price R319
Discovery Miles 3 190
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This study argues that the spread of violent extremism cannot be
fully understood as an ideological or social phenomenon, but must
be viewed as a process that integrates the two forces in a
coevolutionary manner. The same forces that make an ideology
appealing to some aggrieved group of people are not necessarily the
same factors that promote its transfer through social networks of
self-interested human beings. As a result, radicalization
inexorably intertwines social and ideological forces in systemic
fashion. The coevolutionary nature of the social and ideological
spheres presents a unique challenge and is one of the reasons that
rigorous efforts to identify a radical or terrorist profile have
not yielded significant return. Efforts to develop an archetype
often focuses on individual traits, but it may be that profiles
based on social and ideological behavior need to be considered
simultaneously in developing a theory that is actionable for
counter-terrorism practitioners. Key insights from the theoretical
and empirical discussions that follow provide new insights into the
social patterns of violent extremists over time, which are
important to understanding radicalization. The analysis of domestic
terrorism data shows that, to date, there is little evidence of
lone wolf jihadists. There are very few people who progress to
violent action in isolation, and those that do so are often
motivated by other forces such as mental health issues or other
political grievances. Many radicals have a history of social
contact or reaching out to develop relationships with like-minded
individuals. Social relationships follow a nonlinear pattern. They
are increasingly important in the early stages of radicalization
and peak when people accept a violent doctrine. Developing new
relationships becomes less important once individuals come to adopt
radical beliefs. The empirical analysis suggests that the search
for external validation of radical ideas is most important in the
early stages of an individual's radicalization and declines in
importance once the barriers to entry are overcome. There is also a
nonlinear relationship observed in the data analyzed here between
social ties and ideological affinity, whereby those primed for
affinity through exposure to radical ideas in early schooling have
as many close social ties as those with completely secular
schooling. Individuals in between these two extremes averaged fewer
close connections, which challenges conventional wisdom about
ideological predisposition and social relationships. The importance
of self-serving extremism has not been well recognized. Individuals
who recruit others gain social status for their efforts, meaning
that the spread of extremism may be just as much a function of
self-interest as ideological fervor. This has important
implications understanding and countering violent extremism. The
growth of radical groups is a self-organizing process driven by
aggregation of individual behavior, where the entry catalyst into
an extremist cell most likely takes the form of someone who
recruits one, two or three other participants. This
self-organization produces cells that have many close-knit people,
or can easily access others, meaning that such groups are well
suited to facilitation and monitoring. By contrast, such cells are
much less likely to have many gatekeepers or brokers who operate
between cliques.
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