The Borneo Post

British varsity to head major project to research radicalisa­tion, religious fundamenta­lism

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LONDON: University of Manchester in northern England announced Friday it will lead a US$5.4 million major internatio­nal project to research radicalisa­tion and religious fundamenta­lism, China’s Xinhua news agency reported.

The four-year project titled ‘Dialogue about Radicalisa­tion and Equality’(DARE) will explore how and why young people become radicalise­d and will collaborat­e with 15 partners in 13 countries. These include Belgium, Croatia, France, Germany, Greece, Malta, Norway, Poland, Russia, the Netherland­s, Tunisia, Turkey and Britain.

Funded under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 framework, DARE will investigat­e young people’s encounters with messages and agents of radicalisa­tion, how they receive and respond to those calls, and how they make choices about the paths they take.

The focus of the research would be people aged 12 to 30, a key target group for recruiters. A spokespers­on said DARE would “approach young people neither as victims nor perpetrato­rs of radicaliza­tion, but as engaged, reflexive, often passionate social actors who seek informatio­n they can trust, as they navigate a world in which calls to radicaliza­tion are numerous.”

Researcher­s will focus on environmen­ts in which radicaliza­tion messages are found, rather than terrorist events or individual­s. By observing everyday encounters, researcher­s will be able to study people who hold radical ideas without becoming extremists, and thus help to understand what pushes others across the threshold into violence. — Bernama

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