Homegrown terrorism and transformative learning: an interdisciplinary approach to understanding radicalization
- Год публикации
- 2010
- Ключевые слова
- Preventing violent extremismПолитика в области образованияTeacher educationLearning to live together
- Тема
- Гражданственность / Гражданство / ДемократияПредотвращение насильственного экстремизма и геноцидаТрансформационные инициативы / Трансформационные педагогики
- Тип ресурса
- Исследовательские работы / журнальные статьи
- Уровень образования
- Обучение на протяжении всей жизниДругое
- Регион
- Глобальный
- Место публикации
- London; New York
- URL базы данных
- [ENG]
Since 2001, a preponderance of terrorist activity in Europe, North America and Australia has involved radicalized Westerners inspired by Al Qaeda. Described as ‘homegrown terrorism’, perpetrators are citizens and residents born, raised, and educated within the countries they attack. While most scholars and policy-makers agree that radicalization plays a central role in persuading Westerners to embrace terrorism, little research properly investigates the internal and cognitive processes inherent to radicalization. Transformative learning theory, developed from the sciences in education, health and rehabilitation, provides an unconventional and interdisciplinary way to understand the radicalization process. The theory suggests that sustained behavioural change can occur when critical reflection and the development of novel personal belief systems are provoked by specific triggering factors.

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