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Islamic Radicalisation Debate

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Why some new groups can become violent? ... Interactive model of dynamics of violence. Unique implications of religious world-view ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Islamic Radicalisation Debate


1
Islamic RadicalisationDebate
  • Notes from the study of New Religious Movements

2
CONTEST UK Public Policy Strands re Islamist
Extremism
  • PREVENT- integration, undermining grounds,
    challenging
  • PURSUE - disrupting Islamicist terrorists by
    intelligence gathering
  • PROTECT reduce vulnerability of targets
  • PREPARE rapid and effective response

3
New Islamic Movements?
  • The first generation of believers
  • Socio-demographic characteristics
  • Charismatic leaders
  • Social/individual change

4
Cult Controversies concerns discourse
  • Disaffiliation
  • Family
  • Socio-Economic structure
  • Culture
  • Spiritual well-being
  • Violence
  • Brainwashing

5
Experts and Concepts
  • Claims to expertise
  • Frame alignment
  • Brainwashing theories
  • Clinical psychologists
  • Ex-members
  • Anti-cult groups
  • Anti-cult concepts/ Explanations as assumptions
  • Law
  • Deprogramming
  • Law enforcement agencies raids, Waco

6
Experts repudiated Margaret Singer
  • Limited empirical research base
  • Misrepresentation/ misuse of theory
  • R. Lifton, E. Schein
  • Alternative research and explanations ignored
  • Socio-demographic characteristics
  • half-way houses
  • Religious nature
  • Victims active vs. passive involvement
  • Self - perpetuating accounts
  • Positive feedback

7
Radicalisation discourse experts
  • Radicalisation/ de-radicalisation industry
  • Ex-Members
  • Quilliam Foundation
  • Public policy centres
  • Centre for Social Cohesion
  • Radicalisation experts
  • Kings Centre for the Study of Radicalisation

8
Explanations
  • Young Muslims vulnerability to radical preaching
  • Muslim v. Western identity among 2nd - 3d
    generation
  • Link between radical Islamic preaching and
    violent actions
  • Paradox religion is not taken seriously!
  • Recruiting grounds mosques, university
    campuses as gateway organisations everybody is
    vulnerable
  • Anthony Gleece

9
What is radicalisation?
  • Scholars have had little to say about the
    mechanisms through which radicalised individuals
    become members of violent extremist groups
  • Recruitment and Mobilisation, p. 9, emphasis
    added
  • Radicalisation describes the changes in attitude
    that lead towards sanctioning of, and,
    ultimately, involvement in the use of violence
    for political aims (sic., p. 11)
  • a period of learning within a group in which
    the recruits mindset is reconstructed in
    accordance with a new set of beliefs (p. 75)
  • There is no doubt this issue (Iraq) radicalised
    many British Muslims (p. 29)

10
Lessons three analytical lines
  • Who, how and why joins?
  • How the new groups sustain and intensify
    commitment of their members?
  • Why some new groups can become violent?

11
Conversion and commitment getting at the human
heart of the matter
  • Deprivation theory (C. Glock SilberBhatt)
  • Elaboration and extension
  • Moral deprivation
  • Socio-demographic characteristics
  • Social ties (J. Richardson L. Dawson, E. Barker)
  • Weaker and fewer, but not loners lower stakes in
    conformity
  • More available to groups in high tension with
    society
  • Social networks, affective ties, and intensive
    interaction
  • Negotiation and exchange of interests quality of
    relationships
  • High turnover rates
  • What accounts for the degree of commitment?

12
Attraction of the sacred
  • No one joins adangerous cult or terrorist
    sell
  • Socio-demographic characteristics
  • Identity
  • Radical departures
  • Saul Levine (1984)
  • Half-way houses
  • Three attractions of religious solutions
  • Contrast
  • Protective environment
  • Larger sense of purpose

13
Some examples
  • Quentin Wiktorowicz, Joining the Cause
  • Cognitive opening
  • Religious seeking
  • Frame alignment
  • Socialisation
  • Jonathan Githens-Mazer, Radical violent takfiri
    Islamism
  • Robert Lambert, Police v. Islamists Salafis in
    S. London

14
Why do things go wrong?
  • Trajectories of group violence
  • Evolution towards violence
  • Violent by design (some terrorist groups)
  • Beliefs
  • Millenarianism, apocalyptic beliefs
  • Types of millenarianism
  • Interactive model of dynamics of violence
  • Unique implications of religious world-view
  • Mark Juergensmeyer, Cathy Wessinger

15
Why do things go wrong?
  • Charismatic authority
  • Social process
  • Nothing intrinsically dangerous
  • A key variable in defining group trajectories
  • Crises of charismatic authority
  • Leaders inexperience and mistakes

16
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