1st Edition
Nativist and Islamist Radicalism Anger and Anxiety
This book analyses the factors and processes behind radicalisation of both native and self-identified Muslim youths. It argues that European youth responds differently to the challenges posed by contemporary flows of globalisation such as deindustrialisation, socio-economic, political, spatial, and psychological forms of deprivation, humiliation, and structural exclusion.
The book revisits social, economic, political, and psychological drivers of radicalisation and challenges contemporary uses of the term “radicalism”. It argues that neoliberal forms of governance are often responsible for associating radicalism with extremism, terrorism, fundamentalism, and violence. It will appeal to students and scholars of migration, minority studies, nationalisms, European studies, sociology, political science, and psychology.
The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license
Introduction
Ayhan Kaya, Metin Koca, and Ayşenur Benevento
Part I: Spatial Deprivation and Local Contexts
1. Please, Don’t Blame Us: It Is Possible to Be Both Muslim and a Good Citizen in a Catholic Country
Roberta Ricucci
2. Alternative für Deutschland's Appeal to Native Youth in Dresden: Heritage Populism
Ayhan Kaya
3. The Interplay of Psychological Stress, Aggression, Identity, and Implicit Knowledge: Findings from a Qualitative Study of Disengagement and Deradicalisation Processes involving Former Right-Wing Extremists
Denis van de Wetering and Tobias Hecker
Part II: Mental Processes of Radicalisation
4. Islamophobia and Radicalisation: When Attitudes of Both Mainstream Society and Immigrant-Origin Muslims Become Extreme
Constantina Badea
5. Radicalisation, Extremism, or A Third Position?: How French Muslim Women Engage with the Challenges of Assimilation and Difference
Catarina Kinnvall, Tereza Capelos, and Poppy Laurens
6. Is It Radical for a Woman to Become a Stay-at-Home Mother or Wear a Headscarf?
Ayşenur Benevento
Part III: Critical Analyses of Islamist Radicalisation
7. Risking Muslims: Counter-Radicalisation Policies and Responses of Dutch Muslims to the Racialization of Danger
Martijn de Koning
8. The Radicalisation of Moroccan-Origin Youth in Europe: The Case of France
Mehdi Lahlou
9. Religiosities in a Globalised Market: Migrant-Origin Muslim Europeans' Self-Positioning Beyond Sending and Receiving the States’ Politics of Religion
Metin Koca
10. Commentary: Why Extremism?
Olivier Roy
Epilogue
Ayhan Kaya, Metin Koca, and Ayşenur Benevento
Biography
Ayhan Kaya is Professor of Politics and Jean Monnet Chair of European Politics of Interculturalism in the Department of International Relations, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.
Ayşenur Benevento works as a postdoctoral researcher in the European Research Council advanced grant project, PRIME Youth, conducted at Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.
Metin Koca works as a postdoctoral researcher in the European Research Council advanced grant project, PRIME Youth, conducted at Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.