Authors
Gary LaFree, Michael A Jensen, Patrick A James, Aaron Safer‐Lichtenstein
Publication date
2018/5
Journal
Criminology
Volume
56
Issue
2
Pages
233-268
Description
Although research on terrorism has grown rapidly in recent years, few scholars have applied criminological theories to the analysis of individual‐level political extremism. Instead, researchers focused on radicalization have drawn primarily from political science and psychology and have overwhelmingly concentrated on violent extremists, leaving little variation in the dependent variable. With the use of a newly available data set, we test whether variables derived from prominent criminological theories are helpful in distinguishing between nonviolent and violent extremists. The results show that variables related to social control (lack of stable employment), social learning (radical peers), psychological perspectives (history of mental illness), and criminal record all have significant effects on participation in violent political extremism and are robust across multiple techniques for imputing missing data. At the same time …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G LaFree, MA Jensen, PA James, A Safer‐Lichtenstein - Criminology, 2018