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Author Venhaus, John M.

Title Why youth join al-Qaeda [electronic resource] / John M. Venhaus.

Imprint Washington, DC : U.S. Institute of Peace, 2010.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Federal Documents Online  Y 3.P 31:20/236    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource ([20] p.)
Series Special report ; 236
Special report (United States Institute of Peace) ; 236.
Note Title from title screen (viewed on May 14, 2010).
"May 2010."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 19-[20]).
Summary Interviews and personal histories of 2,032 "foreign fighters" show that rather than be recruited, young men actively seek out al-Qaeda and its associated movements. Al-Qaeda is more than just an organization; it is an ideology and a popular global brand that spins a heroic narrative with an idealized version of Islamic jihad. Al-Qaeda's ubiquitous message of anti-Muslim oppression and global jihad appeals to the developmental needs of adolescents. To defeat al-Qaeda, it is crucial to understand who seeks to join and why. Common myths and misconceptions about why young men join extremist movements ignore the proximate causes. Potential recruits have an unfulfilled need to define themselves. Al-Qaeda's ability to turn them to violence is rooted in what each seeks: Revenge seekers need an outlet for their frustration, status seekers need recognition, identity seekers need a group to join, and thrill seekers need adventure. To prevent radicalization, calm the revenge seeker with programs to vent his frustration (e.g., sports, creative arts, political discussion outlets, young adult mentors); promote the status seeker with opportunities to show off his self-perceived talents (e.g., local political participation, international exchange programs, positive public media depictions of young Muslims); give the identity seeker groups to join (sports leagues, model governments, student societies, community service programs, adventure groups); and turn off the thrill seeker by tarnishing al-Qaeda's image. Fragmented efforts of public diplomacy, strategic communications, and information operations are underresourced, poorly coordinated, and understaffed given the strength and pervasiveness of al-Qaeda's message. A U.S. Strategic Communications Agency should be established to consolidate efforts under a cabinet-level secretary of strategic communications; execute a presidentially approved national communications strategy; manage funding of all U.S. communications programs; enable, empower, support, and reinforce credible existing voices in the Muslim world; build U.S. message credibility with honest, transparent dialogue that closes the "say-do" gap in recent foreign policy; and collect, synthesize, and analyze public opinion research.
Subject Qaida (Organization)
Child terrorists.
Terrorism -- Prevention.
Added Author United States Institute of Peace.
Other Form: Print version: Venhaus, John M. Why youth join al-Qaeda (OCoLC)649060099
Gpo Item No. 1063-K (online)
Sudoc No. Y 3.P 31:20/236

 
    
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