000 01527nab a22001937a 4500
008 120229t xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
100 _914060
_aHafez, Mohammed M.
245 _aThe Ties that Bind
_h[Recurso electrónico] PDF
_b: how Terrorists Exploit Family Bonds
300 _aRecurso online
520 _aTightening security environments are encouraging jihadis to turn increasingly to the family unit for recruits. This phenomenon complicates efforts to detect, monitor, and prevent violent radicalization. Kinship recruitment, which is difficult for security agencies to observe, is facilitated by several psychological mechanisms that bind individuals together on the path to extremism. Importantly, it deters ambivalent recruits from defecting to the authorities for fear of damaging their own valued relationships. The reliance on kinship recruitment is supplemented by greater use of social media and an emphasis on recruiting Islamic converts and women, which suggests that jihadis are adjusting their mobilization patterns to avoid detection based on previous, well-known strategies for radicalization.
650 0 _91905
_aYihad
650 0 _914061
_aFamilia
650 0 _91738
_aTerrorismo
_xPrevención
650 0 _91740
_aTerrorismo
_xMovimientos extremistas
773 0 _aCTC Sentinel
_g. -- Vol. 9 Issue 2 (Feb. 2016) p. 15-17
_iEn :
_tCTC Sentinel
_w4458
856 4 _uhttps://www.ctc.usma.edu/v2/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/CTC-SENTINEL-Vol9Iss27.pdf
_qPDF
942 _2udc
_cAN
999 _c17904
_d17907