Full Description
This volume is a timely contribution to the current debates and potential efforts to study and counter the phenomena of extreme right violence in a period when the rise of right-wing extremism is being witnessed across the globe. Against this backdrop, the violent radicalisation and extremism of individuals and groups belonging to the extreme right threaten to undermine and destabilize societies and democratic orders, leaving a research gap that has only started to be filled in recent years, but that is still quite wide when it comes to counter-terrorism approaches to extreme right violence. Learning from the past, and trying to avoid similar mistakes, this volume creates a much-needed space for open, honest, and ethical debate around countering extreme right violence, answering social and political calls to debate how to counter this kind of violence. This volume brings together a group of interdisciplinary scholars to contribute to national and international, academic and policy debates about countering extreme right violence from a critical perspective.
Volume II focuses particularly on exploring how extreme right violence has been approached in different spatial and temporal contexts, examining how the criminal justice system has dealt with the threat of and actual violence perpetrated by the extreme right, deconstructing current counter-terrorism approaches from feminist and gender perspectives, and formulating a critical approach to countering extreme right violence. It will be of great interest to all students of terrorism studies, security studies, international relations, and political science in general.
The chapters in this book were originally published in Critical Studies on Terrorism.
Contents
Introduction—CTS and Right-wing terrorism and counterterrorism: Volume II, The politics of countering political violence 1. Terror as justice, justice as terror: counterterrorism and anti-Black racism in the United States 2. When (and where) can right-wing terrorists be charged with terrorism? 3. "From street soldiers to political soldiers": assessing how extreme right violence has been criminalised in Portugal 4. The medicalisation of threats, immigration as contagion, and White supremacy in an age of terror 5. "Prevent duty": empirical reflections on the challenges of addressing far-right extremism within secondary schools and colleges in the UK 6. Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and countering violent extremism in the Western Balkans and the South Caucasus: the cases of Kosovo and Georgia 7. Strain theory, resilience, and far-right extremism: the impact of gender, life experiences and the internet 8. Anti-feminism, gender and the far-right gap in C/PVE measures 9. Misogynistic terrorism: it has always been here