‘Paving the way for Extremism: How Preventing the Symptoms Does Not Cure the Disease of Terrorism’

<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The British government’s controversial counter-terrorism strategies and policies have come under fierce opposition with critics arguing it has not actually prevented extremism but has manifested itself into a political and ideological ca...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Imran Awan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of St Andrews 2011-11-01
Series:Journal of Terrorism Research
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:http://jtr.st-andrews.ac.uk/articles/224
Description
Summary:<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The British government’s controversial counter-terrorism strategies and policies have come under fierce opposition with critics arguing it has not actually prevented extremism but has manifested itself into a political and ideological campaign that unfairly targets the Muslim community. Moreover, such strategies have marginalised the Muslim community in the UK from wider civic society and created an atmosphere of hate and anger. The Prime Minister of Great Britain, David Cameron in 2010, spoke at a conference in Munich about security, radicalisation, and multi-culturalism, sparking a debate about how the UK monitors and deals with extremism. Blaming the doctrine of ‘state-multiculturalism’ the British coalition government argued for a more ‘active muscular liberalism’ which would identify the root causes of extremist ideologies.  Moreover, this paranoia and hysteria has led to a social, political, moral and theological debate about Islamism, Muslims, and terrorism which is fuelled by the way Britain is portrayed across the world as a country where extremist organisations employ tactics of persuasion, indoctrination, radicalisation and the promotion of religious intolerance.</span>
ISSN:2049-7040