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040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
100 _92751
_aAtran, Scott
100 _94309
_a[et al.]
245 _aThe Islamic State’s Lingering Legacy among Young Men from the Mosul Area
_hRecurso electrónico [PDF]
260 _bCTCSentinel
_cApr. 2018
300 _aRecurso online, 8 p.
520 _aAfter expulsion of Islamic State forces from Mosul, Iraq’s government declared the country “fully liberated” and the Islamic State “defeated.” But field interviews and non-threatening psychological experiments with young Sunni Arab men from the Mosul area indicate that the Islamic State may have lost its “caliphate,” but not necessarily the allegiance of supporters of both a Sunni Arab homeland and governance by sharia law. These continued supporters of some Islamic State core values appear more willing to make costly sacrifices for these values than those who value a unified Iraq. Nearly all study participants rejected democracy, and expressed unwillingness to tradeoff values for material gain. Thus, rather than relying on implementation of Western values or material incentives to undercut (re)radicalization, the findings suggest that alternative interpretations of local society’s core values could be leveraged as ‘wedge issues’ to better divide groups such as the Islamic State from supporting populations.
610 0 _912870
_aEstado Islámico
650 0 _91714
_aJóvenes
650 0 _91740
_aTerrorismo
_xMovimientos extremistas
651 0 _91852
_aIrak
773 _aCTC Sentinel
_g. -- Vol. 11 Issue 4 (Apr. 2018) p. 15-23.
_iEn :
_tCTC Sentinel
_w4458
856 _uhttps://ctc.usma.edu/islamic-states-lingering-legacy-among-young-men-mosul-area/
942 _2udc
_cAN
999 _c21208
_d21211