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Deradicalizing Islamist extremists / Angel Rabasa [and others. [electronic resource]

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Rand Corporation monograph seriesPublication details: Santa Monica, CA : RAND, (c)2011.Description: 1 online resource (xxvii, 214 pages) : color illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780833051172
  • 0833051172
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • HV6431
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Disengagement and deradicalization -- Survey of deradicalization programs -- Middle Eastern deradicalization programs -- Southeast Asian programs -- European approaches -- Collective deradicalization -- Implications and recommendations.
Summary: Considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the process of violent Islamist radicalization, but far less research has explored the equally important process of deradicalization, or how individuals or groups abandon extremist groups and ideologies. Proactive measures to prevent vulnerable individuals from radicalizing and to rehabilitate those who have already embraced extremism have been implemented, to varying degrees, in several Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, and European countries. A key question is whether the objective of these programs should be disengagement (a change in behavior) or deradicalization (a change in beliefs) of militants. Furthermore, a unique challenge posed by militant Islamist groups is that their ideology is rooted in a major world religion. An examination of deradicalization and counter-radicalization programs in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Europe assessed the strengths and weaknesses of each program, finding that the best-designed programs leverage local cultural patterns to achieve their objectives. Such programs cannot simply be transplanted from one country to another. They need to develop organically in a specific country and culture.
Item type: Online Book
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Includes bibliographical references.

Disengagement and deradicalization -- Survey of deradicalization programs -- Middle Eastern deradicalization programs -- Southeast Asian programs -- European approaches -- Collective deradicalization -- Implications and recommendations.

Considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the process of violent Islamist radicalization, but far less research has explored the equally important process of deradicalization, or how individuals or groups abandon extremist groups and ideologies. Proactive measures to prevent vulnerable individuals from radicalizing and to rehabilitate those who have already embraced extremism have been implemented, to varying degrees, in several Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, and European countries. A key question is whether the objective of these programs should be disengagement (a change in behavior) or deradicalization (a change in beliefs) of militants. Furthermore, a unique challenge posed by militant Islamist groups is that their ideology is rooted in a major world religion. An examination of deradicalization and counter-radicalization programs in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Europe assessed the strengths and weaknesses of each program, finding that the best-designed programs leverage local cultural patterns to achieve their objectives. Such programs cannot simply be transplanted from one country to another. They need to develop organically in a specific country and culture.

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