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Journal article 414 views

Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation

Elizabeth Pearson, Emily Winterbotham

The RUSI Journal, Volume: 162, Issue: 3, Pages: 60 - 72

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Abstract

Elizabeth Pearson and Emily Winterbotham explore the role of gender in radicalisation to Daesh (also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, ISIS). They discuss possible factors in female radicalisation, and how radicalisation differs between men and women. They find that the gender of the rec...

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Published in: The RUSI Journal
ISSN: 0307-1847 1744-0378
Published: 2017
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42200
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first_indexed 2018-08-02T14:14:35Z
last_indexed 2018-08-02T14:14:35Z
id cronfa42200
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spelling 2018-08-02T13:08:13Z v2 42200 2018-08-02 Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation Elizabeth Pearson Elizabeth Pearson true false b849177199f7a9a44ddecec011c4bf92 299c21d73ebdf0fe5e0284ccd6df2b5e ArmRNIyen+4ST4MCWdiWmhXCE6Z9OGBXOD9D5JU4+T4= 2018-08-02 CLAW Elizabeth Pearson and Emily Winterbotham explore the role of gender in radicalisation to Daesh (also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, ISIS). They discuss possible factors in female radicalisation, and how radicalisation differs between men and women. They find that the gender of the recruit affects the enabling factors, mechanisms and locations relating to radicalisation. The article challenges assertions that the recruitment of young men and women to Daesh follows identical patterns, as well as the narrative of women as innately peaceful, or as actors coerced into joining Daesh, revealing the importance of female empowerment in the group’s appeal. Journal article The RUSI Journal 162 3 60 72 0307-1847 1744-0378 radicalisation; gender; women; ISIS; Jihad; Islamism; recruitment; Daesh 28 7 2017 2017-07-28 10.1080/03071847.2017.1353251 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03071847.2017.1353251?scroll=top&needAccess=true Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law Law CLAW CLAW None Doctoral None 2018-08-02T13:08:13Z 2018-08-02T13:04:49Z Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law Law Elizabeth Pearson 1 Emily Winterbotham 2
title Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
spellingShingle Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
Pearson, Elizabeth
title_short Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
title_full Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
title_fullStr Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
title_full_unstemmed Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
title_sort Women, Gender and Daesh Radicalisation
author_id_str_mv b849177199f7a9a44ddecec011c4bf92
author_id_fullname_str_mv b849177199f7a9a44ddecec011c4bf92_***_Pearson, Elizabeth
author Pearson, Elizabeth
author2 Elizabeth Pearson
Emily Winterbotham
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container_volume 162
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container_start_page 60
publishDate 2017
institution Swansea University
issn 0307-1847
1744-0378
doi_str_mv 10.1080/03071847.2017.1353251
college_str Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law
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hierarchy_top_title Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law
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hierarchy_parent_title Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law
department_str Law{{{_:::_}}}Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law{{{_:::_}}}Law
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03071847.2017.1353251?scroll=top&needAccess=true
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description Elizabeth Pearson and Emily Winterbotham explore the role of gender in radicalisation to Daesh (also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, ISIS). They discuss possible factors in female radicalisation, and how radicalisation differs between men and women. They find that the gender of the recruit affects the enabling factors, mechanisms and locations relating to radicalisation. The article challenges assertions that the recruitment of young men and women to Daesh follows identical patterns, as well as the narrative of women as innately peaceful, or as actors coerced into joining Daesh, revealing the importance of female empowerment in the group’s appeal.
published_date 2017-07-28T15:14:35Z
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