Extremist Construction of Identity: How Escalating Demands for Legitimacy Shape and Define In-Group and Out-Group Dynamics
Author(s) -
JM Berger
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
terrorism and counter-terrorism studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2468-0664
pISSN - 2468-0656
DOI - 10.19165/2017.1.07
Subject(s) - group (periodic table) , legitimacy , identity (music) , group dynamic , dynamics (music) , social identity theory , collective identity , social psychology , sociology , political science , psychology , social group , aesthetics , politics , physics , law , art , pedagogy , quantum mechanics
This Research Paper examines how the white supremacist movement Christian Identity emerged from a non-extremist forerunner known as British Israelism. By examining ideological shifts over the course of nearly a century, the paper seeks to identify key pivot points in the movement’s shift toward extremism and explain the process through which extremist ideologues construct and define in-group and out-group identities. Based on these findings, the paper proposes a new framework for analysing and understanding the behaviour and emergence of extremist groups. The proposed framework can be leveraged to design strategic counterterrorism communications programmes using a linkage-based approach that deconstructs the process of extremist in-group and out-group definition. Future publications will continue this study, seeking to refine the framework and operationalise messaging recommendations.
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