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Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering

Kamil Yilmaz Orcid Logo, Joe Whittaker Orcid Logo, M. Alper Sozer, Niyazi Ekici Orcid Logo

Critical Studies on Terrorism

Swansea University Authors: Kamil Yilmaz Orcid Logo, Joe Whittaker Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/17539153.2024.2397148

Abstract

This study explores how and why some individuals are resilient to radicalization by focusing on individuals who were labelled ‘terrorists’ for their alleged involvement or support for an attempted coup that took place in Turkey on July 15, 2016, yet who have shown no sign of violent radicalisation s...

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Published in: Critical Studies on Terrorism
Published: Taylor and Francis
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67188
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first_indexed 2024-07-25T15:10:38Z
last_indexed 2024-07-25T15:10:38Z
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spelling v2 67188 2024-07-25 Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering 20e299fd61533a98605102c73074732a 0000-0001-9453-8415 Kamil Yilmaz Kamil Yilmaz true false 112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab 0000-0001-7342-6369 Joe Whittaker Joe Whittaker true false 2024-07-25 SOSS This study explores how and why some individuals are resilient to radicalization by focusing on individuals who were labelled ‘terrorists’ for their alleged involvement or support for an attempted coup that took place in Turkey on July 15, 2016, yet who have shown no sign of violent radicalisation since. Drawing from 15 interviews, it assesses both the potential radicalisation risk factors that the participants display, such as political persecution, imprisonment, torture, social pressure and forced migration. Then it explores participants’ explanation for why they have not become radicalized, including the role of the Hizmet doctrine, their religious adherence, individual personality traits and resources (e.g., social capital) through a socioecological framework. While terrorism studies have focused extensively on pathways towards radicalisation and countering radicalisation, this study contributes to a small body of research to explore the notion of “non-radicalisation”, informing the literature on resilience and protective factors towards larger populations. Journal Article Critical Studies on Terrorism Taylor and Francis 0 0 0 0001-01-01 10.1080/17539153.2024.2397148 COLLEGE NANME Social Sciences School COLLEGE CODE SOSS Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) Swansea University 2024-08-29T16:05:22.4292544 2024-07-25T16:00:15.8549800 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy Kamil Yilmaz 0000-0001-9453-8415 1 Joe Whittaker 0000-0001-7342-6369 2 M. Alper Sozer 3 Niyazi Ekici 0000-0001-9565-4821 4 263 Kamil Yilmaz 0000-0001-9453-8415 kamil.yilmaz@swansea.ac.uk false 4
title Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
spellingShingle Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
Kamil Yilmaz
Joe Whittaker
title_short Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
title_full Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
title_fullStr Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
title_full_unstemmed Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
title_sort Resilient Non-Radicalizers: Beating the Odds through Non-Radicalisation Despite Significant Suffering
author_id_str_mv 20e299fd61533a98605102c73074732a
112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab
author_id_fullname_str_mv 20e299fd61533a98605102c73074732a_***_Kamil Yilmaz
112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab_***_Joe Whittaker
author Kamil Yilmaz
Joe Whittaker
author2 Kamil Yilmaz
Joe Whittaker
M. Alper Sozer
Niyazi Ekici
format Journal article
container_title Critical Studies on Terrorism
institution Swansea University
doi_str_mv 10.1080/17539153.2024.2397148
publisher Taylor and Francis
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Social Sciences - Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Social Sciences - Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy
document_store_str 0
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description This study explores how and why some individuals are resilient to radicalization by focusing on individuals who were labelled ‘terrorists’ for their alleged involvement or support for an attempted coup that took place in Turkey on July 15, 2016, yet who have shown no sign of violent radicalisation since. Drawing from 15 interviews, it assesses both the potential radicalisation risk factors that the participants display, such as political persecution, imprisonment, torture, social pressure and forced migration. Then it explores participants’ explanation for why they have not become radicalized, including the role of the Hizmet doctrine, their religious adherence, individual personality traits and resources (e.g., social capital) through a socioecological framework. While terrorism studies have focused extensively on pathways towards radicalisation and countering radicalisation, this study contributes to a small body of research to explore the notion of “non-radicalisation”, informing the literature on resilience and protective factors towards larger populations.
published_date 0001-01-01T16:05:20Z
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