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A Public Health Approach to Understanding and Preventing Violent Radicalization

Publisher: BioMed Central
Geography: United Kingdom, Western Europe
Journal: BMC Medicine, Volume: 10, Issue: 16
Year Published: 2012
Entry Types: Academic Journal Article
Chicago Style Citation

Bhui, Kamaldeep S., Madelyn H. Hicks, Myrna Lashley and Edgar Jones. “A Public Health Approach to Understanding and Preventing Violent Radicalization.” BMC Medicine 10, no. 16 (2012): 1-8. doi: 10.1186/1741-7015-10-16.

Subjects: Communities, Counterterrorism, Criminal Justice, Homegrown terrorism, Radicalization and Deradicalization, Violence, Youth
Affiliate(s): Lashley, Myrna |

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Description:

Very recent acts of terrorism in the UK were perpetrated by ‘homegrown’, well educated young people, rather than by foreign Islamist groups; consequently, a process of violent radicalization was proposed to explain how ordinary people were recruited and persuaded to sacrifice their lives.

Counterterrorism approaches grounded in the criminal justice system have not prevented violent radicalization. Indeed there is some evidence that these approaches may have encouraged membership of radical groups by not recognizing Muslim communities as allies, citizens, victims of terrorism, and victims of discrimination, but only as suspect communities who were then further alienated. Informed by public health research and practice, a new approach is proposed to target populations vulnerable to recruitment, rather than rely only on research of well known terrorist groups and individual perpetrators of terrorist acts.

This paper proposes public health research and practice to guard against violent radicalization. (Source: Publication)