00677nam a2200205 i 450099100436143830753620250702095132.0250114s1926 it er 001 0 ita dBibl. Dip.le Aggr. Scienze Giuridiche - Sez. Studi GiuridiciitaSocioculturale Scsita945.7023De Secly, Luigi494018La conquista regia :il Mezzogiorno e il fascismo /Luigi De SeclyTrani :Vecchi ,1926126 p. ;20 cmFascismo1920-1925Questione meridionale1920-1925991004361438307536La conquista regia4307480UNISALENTO03059nam 22004213c 450 99664784350331620250310015556.01-962551-55-510.1515/9781962551557(CKB)37304791900041(DE-B1597)729836(DE-B1597)9781962551557(EXLCZ)993730479190004120250123d2025 || |engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierResisting radicalization exploring the nonoccurrence of violent extremism /Morten Bøås, Gilad Ben-Nun, Ulf Engel, and Kari Osland, editorsBoulder ;London :Lynne Rienner Publishers2025.1 online resource (281 p.)979-88-96160-16-8 1-962551-54-7 Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Most People Are Not Radicalized -- Part 1 Exploring the Nonoccurrence of Violent Extremism -- 2 Enabling Environments -- 3 The Entrepreneurs of Violence -- 4 Measuring Social Cohesion and Resilience -- Part 2 Cases from North Africa, the Middle East, and the Balkans -- 5 Islamists and the Choice Not to Take Up Arms: Algeria and Egyp -- 6 Religious Resilience and the Guardian State: Morocco and Jordan -- 7 Ethnonationalism and Religious Radicalization: Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina -- 8 Exporting Radicalization and Strengthening Resilience: Tunisia and Kosovo -- 9 Regime Survival and Mobilization: Iraq, Mali, and Syria -- 10 Traditional Authority and Local Community Resilience: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iraq, and Syria -- 11 External Donors and the Marketing of P/CVE: Niger, Tunisia, and Syria -- Part 3 Conclusion -- 12 P/CVE Policies of Europe and the United States -- 13 Implications for Policy and Future Research -- List of Acronyms -- References -- Contributors -- Index -- About the BookPrecarious living conditions across the Balkans, the Middle East, and North Africa create fertile ground for radical ideas. Yet, despite genuine grievances and legitimate grounds for anger, most people living in these regions are not radicalized and do not embrace ideas that lead to acts of violent extremism. Which raises the question . why? To answer this question, the authors of Resisting Radicalization investigate the nonoccurrence of violent extremism in what they term enabling environments. Their work, the result of a multiyear international project, has critical implications for the future of P/CVE (Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism) programs. POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / EuropeanbisacshPOLITICAL SCIENCE / World / European.303.48/4Bøås MortenedtBen-Nun GiladedtOsland KariedtDE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK996647843503316Resisting radicalization4335573UNISA