Structural Influences On Involvement in European Homegrown Terrorism

ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.Authors Dr Edwin Bakker, Dr Quirine Eijkman, Drs Bart Schuurman
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublishedIn Journal Terrorism and Political Violence
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublicationDate 1 January 2016
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.Lectorates Access to Justice
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublicationType Article

ResearchComponents.PublicationContent.Header

This article empirically assesses the applicability of structural-level hypotheses for involvement in terrorism within the context of European homegrown jihadism. It uses these hypotheses to study how structural factors influenced involvement in the Dutch “Hofstadgroup.” Structural factors enabled the group’s emergence and its participants’ adoption of extremist views. They also motivated involvement in political violence and a shift in some participants’ focus from joining Islamist insurgents overseas to committing terrorism in the Netherlands. Finally, structural factors precipitated an actual terrorist attack. No support is found for the frequently encountered argument that discrimination and exclusion drive involvement in European homegrown jihadism. Instead, geopolitical grievances were prime drivers of this process.

Downloads en links

researchcomponents.publicationcontent.personslist.publicationauthors

  • Querine Eijkman | Researcher | Research group Access to Justice
    Dr Quirine Eijkman
    • Professor
    • researchcomponents.publicationcontent.authorlectoratelabelsingle: Access to Justice

ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.Language English
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.PublishedIn Journal Terrorism and Political Violence
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.Keywords Hofstadgroup, homegrown jihadism, levels of analysis, The Netherlands, primary sources, structural-level factors
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.PageRange 1-19

Quirine Eijkman

Querine Eijkman | Researcher | Research group Access to Justice

Quirine Eijkman

  • Professor
  • ResearchComponents.ResearcherContactBlock.LectorateAccess to Justice

Access to Justice