The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands

While the study of extremism has traditionally focused on the national and transnational contexts, systematic studies of extremism at the sub-national level remain scarce. This absence of such research is particularly striking in countries like the Netherlands, where efforts to Prevent and Counter V...

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Main Authors: Fleur Valk, Léonie de Jonge, Pieter Nanninga
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Daniel Koehler 2023-06-01
Series:Journal for Deradicalization
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/741
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author Fleur Valk
Léonie de Jonge
Pieter Nanninga
author_facet Fleur Valk
Léonie de Jonge
Pieter Nanninga
author_sort Fleur Valk
collection DOAJ
description While the study of extremism has traditionally focused on the national and transnational contexts, systematic studies of extremism at the sub-national level remain scarce. This absence of such research is particularly striking in countries like the Netherlands, where efforts to Prevent and Counter Violent Extremism (P/CVE) are typically delegated to local authorities. Thus, moving beyond the focus on how and why extremism develops, this study analyses when and where it arises. We do so by focusing on the Northern Netherlands (i.e. the provinces of Groningen, Friesland and Drenthe). This region is characterised by specific problems linked to societal discontent surrounding peripherality, the construction of wind farms, reception centres for asylum seekers, and induced earthquakes due to gas extraction. As such, it provides an interesting laboratory environment to study regional and local expressions of extremism. Empirical support is drawn from a wide range of primary and secondary sources, notably semi-structured interviews (N=33) with regional experts, professionals and practitioners, including municipal workers, police officers, and social workers. The findings indicate that the extremist landscape has changed considerably in recent years; specifically, anti-government extremism has become more prevalent than ‘traditional’ forms of extremism (e.g. far-left, far-right and religious extremism). While this is in line with national and transnational trends, the rise of anti-government extremism in the Northern Netherlands appears to be particularly pronounced because of the regional circumstances. This has implications for P/CVE efforts, since the latter remain largely geared towards and focused on countering jihadism. In other words, there is a discrepancy between the nature of extremism on the one hand, and P/CVE approaches on the other.
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spelling doaj.art-aaa45779e02e49128ee311fd05dc5ccc2023-07-01T06:07:49ZdeuDaniel KoehlerJournal for Deradicalization2363-98492023-06-0135Summer76106The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands Fleur Valk0 Léonie de Jonge 1Pieter Nanninga 2University of GroningenUniversity of GroningenUniversity of GroningenWhile the study of extremism has traditionally focused on the national and transnational contexts, systematic studies of extremism at the sub-national level remain scarce. This absence of such research is particularly striking in countries like the Netherlands, where efforts to Prevent and Counter Violent Extremism (P/CVE) are typically delegated to local authorities. Thus, moving beyond the focus on how and why extremism develops, this study analyses when and where it arises. We do so by focusing on the Northern Netherlands (i.e. the provinces of Groningen, Friesland and Drenthe). This region is characterised by specific problems linked to societal discontent surrounding peripherality, the construction of wind farms, reception centres for asylum seekers, and induced earthquakes due to gas extraction. As such, it provides an interesting laboratory environment to study regional and local expressions of extremism. Empirical support is drawn from a wide range of primary and secondary sources, notably semi-structured interviews (N=33) with regional experts, professionals and practitioners, including municipal workers, police officers, and social workers. The findings indicate that the extremist landscape has changed considerably in recent years; specifically, anti-government extremism has become more prevalent than ‘traditional’ forms of extremism (e.g. far-left, far-right and religious extremism). While this is in line with national and transnational trends, the rise of anti-government extremism in the Northern Netherlands appears to be particularly pronounced because of the regional circumstances. This has implications for P/CVE efforts, since the latter remain largely geared towards and focused on countering jihadism. In other words, there is a discrepancy between the nature of extremism on the one hand, and P/CVE approaches on the other.https://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/741anti-government extremismplace resentmentpreventing and countering violent extremismregional case studyright-wing extremismthe netherlands
spellingShingle Fleur Valk
Léonie de Jonge
Pieter Nanninga
The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
Journal for Deradicalization
anti-government extremism
place resentment
preventing and countering violent extremism
regional case study
right-wing extremism
the netherlands
title The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
title_full The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
title_fullStr The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
title_short The Regional Face of Extremism: A Case Study of the Northern Netherlands
title_sort regional face of extremism a case study of the northern netherlands
topic anti-government extremism
place resentment
preventing and countering violent extremism
regional case study
right-wing extremism
the netherlands
url https://journals.sfu.ca/jd/index.php/jd/article/view/741
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AT leoniedejonge theregionalfaceofextremismacasestudyofthenorthernnetherlands
AT pieternanninga theregionalfaceofextremismacasestudyofthenorthernnetherlands
AT fleurvalk regionalfaceofextremismacasestudyofthenorthernnetherlands
AT leoniedejonge regionalfaceofextremismacasestudyofthenorthernnetherlands
AT pieternanninga regionalfaceofextremismacasestudyofthenorthernnetherlands