Authors
Angel Gómez, Scott Atran, Juana Chinchilla, Alexandra Vázquez, Lucia López-Rodríguez, Borja Paredes, Mercedes Martínez, Laura Blanco, Beatriz Alba, Hend Bautista, Saulo Fernández, Florencia Pozuelo-Rubio, José Luis González-Álvarez, Sandra Chiclana, Héctor Valladares-Narganes, María Alonso, Alfredo Ruíz-Alvarado, José Luis López-Novo, Richard Davis
Publication date
2022/2/16
Journal
Scientific reports
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pages
2596
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Is terrorism just another form of criminal activity, as many nations’ justice systems assume? We offer an initial answer using face-to-face interviews and structured surveys in thirty-five Spanish prisons. Recent theories of extreme sacrifice inform this direct observational and comparative study. Islamist terrorists display levels of self-sacrifice for their primary reference group similar to that of Latino gangs, but greater willingness to sacrifice for primary values than other inmates (non-radical Muslims, Latino gangs, and delinquent bands). This disposition is motivated by stronger perceived injustice, discrimination, and a visceral commitment to such values (risk/radicalization factors). Nevertheless, state authorities, prison staff, and families are (protective/de-radicalization) factors apt to reduce willingness to sacrifice and keep foreign fighters, now being released in large numbers, from returning to terrorism.
Total citations
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