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Counter-radicalisation policy and the securing of British identity
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01 June 2021

'The author provides an original analysis of this strategy and its consequences on society through a critical and post-structuralist framework, which greatly complements the existing Critical Terrorism Studies’ literature on the subject....Martin’s work represents, therefore, an important analysis not only for scholars researching and deconstructing Prevent and the CONTEST strategy in the UK. It will also be of interest for those inquiring into the consequences on society of counter-radicalisation strategies and of other measures implemented in the name of security, and on how these impact and shape societies and participation in political life. Counter-radicalisation policy and the securing of British identity is thus an important and original contribution to Critical) Terrorism Studies' and (Critical) Security Studies and, more broadly, to disciplines such as International Relations, Criminology and Sociology.'
Alice Martini, Critical Studies on Terrorism
Introduction
1 The (problematic) history of Prevent
2 The ‘separatist’ literature on Prevent (and the way forward)
3 The temporal ambition of Prevent: stopping people becoming terrorists
4 Crossing the temporal gap: vulnerability, extremism and the ordering of identities
5 Governing threatening environments: community cohesion and problem institutions
6 The Channel project: identifying individuals who are vulnerable to radicalisation
7 The identity politics of Prevent
Conclusion
Index