ABSTRACT

This book offers a general theory of violent radicalization and uses case studies from a variety of different countries and groups to illustrate this.

The first and fundamental objective of the book is to provide an explanatory framework to understand phenomena related to violent radicalization, deradicalization, the prevention of radicalization and to political violence; in particular, that inspired by religion. The second objective follows from the first. Understanding violent radicalization of religious inspiration implies delving into two key concepts: violent radicalization and religion. This second objective is indeed elusive, since, on the one hand, many liberal democracies have undergone processes of secularization or, at least, have lost interest in examining religion in public debates. Therefore, rigorously exploring social problems where religion seems to be involved, in one way or another, is complicated. Moreover, the notion of violent radicalization, in turn, is highly contested and confused with other ideas, such as polarization, extremism, terrorism or nonviolent radicalization. Finally, the book aims to bring theory into dialogue with empirical phenomena, and to test it against concrete cases related to violent radicalization and its prevention, on the one hand, and religion, on the other. The book’s originality comes from both its innovative, methodological approach and its breadth, with cases from several countries (Spain, the United States, Ireland, India, Israel, Russia and Colombia) and different ideological groups (revolutionary communists, nationalist movements, Jihadist groups, white and black supremacists).

This book will be of much interest to students of terrorism and political violence, radicalization, sociology and international relations in general.

part I|48 pages

Theoretical and Methodological Foundations

chapter 2|16 pages

Factors Related to Violent Radicalization

The Macro, the Meso and the Micro

chapter 3|17 pages

Towards an Empirically-based Theory of the Nature of Violent Radicalization

Moral Structure, Community and Jihadism

part II|32 pages

Case Studies

chapter 4|18 pages

Comparative Analysis of Different Types of Violent Radicalization

From ETA, the IRA and FARC, to the American Extreme Right

part III|75 pages

Prevention and Deradicalization

chapter 6|18 pages

The Role of Individual Indicators and Territorial Indicators

The Strange Connection Between the Socioeconomic Structure of Neighborhoods and Terrorism

chapter 7|13 pages

Prevention Programs and Deradicalization

The Turn Towards Resilience

chapter 8|42 pages

Theory in Action

Programs on the Notions of “Moral Structure” and “Community”

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue and Conclusions