Al Qaeda in the West as a Youth Movement: The Power of a Narrative
Published By: MICRON on eSS | Published Date: December, 22 , 2008In recent years there has been a strong focus on ‘Islamic radicalisation’ in
Europe, due both to the threat of terrorism and its security implications, and to the
issue of integrating second generation migrants in Europe. This paper analyses two
main approaches to studying the roots of radicalisation. The first is vertical, and
involves establishing a genealogy of radicalisation from the Koran and the first
Islamic community to the present Islamist radicals. It is argued that this approach fails
to understand the roots of terrorism and arbitrarily isolates ‘Muslim’ violence from
other levels of violence among European youth. The second approach is horizontal
and consists of putting the ‘leap into terrorism’ into the context of the contemporary
phenomena of violence affecting our societies in general, and specifically youth.
Following this approach, it is more productive to understand Al Qaeda in Europe as a
youth movement, which shares many factors with other forms of dissent. An effective
strategy to combat terrorism has two levels: one employs traditional intelligence and
legal techniques to trace and neutralise cells. The second would be to destroy Al
Qaeda’s narrative, by de-Islamising it, rather than demonising it as ‘bad Islam’.[ MICRON Policy Working Paper 2]
Author(s): Olivier Roy | Posted on: Jan 22, 2009 | Views(1583) | Download (4385)