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Briefings: Reciprocal radicalisation

Debate

reciprocal radicalisation

What is reciprocal Radicalisation?

Reciprocal radicalisation (and related terms, including cumulative extremism and co-radicalisation) is the idea that extremist groups fuel one another’s rhetoric and/or actions, including violence.

It emerged as a concept after the 2001 riots in Northern England linked to the presence of extremists, and was further embedded following the establishment of the English Defence League in response to demonstrations by Islamist extremists in 2009.

In 2015, reference to reciprocal radicalisation was made in the UK Government’s Counter-Extremism Strategy. Despite finding a footing in both academic and policy circles, the empirical evidence for reciprocal radicalisation so far has been mixed.

Analyses suggest that relationships between extremist groups are more complex, and are mediated by the state, digital technology, and the news media.

Briefings

These briefings were delivered as part of a CREST Workshop on reciprocal radicalisation organised in London in May 2018, and attended by thirty-five practitioners from the UK government, police, probation and the prison service.

Papers and discussion during the day covered topics including interactive escalation of rhetoric and violence between extremist groups, signs and causal factors, the impact of the state, mainstream and social media, and potential opportunities for intervention.

The briefings are also available in a summary report, available to download here.

All of these articles are available under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0 licence. This means you can reproduce this content, but you must credit and link back to Radicalisation Research.


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