Gendered radicalisation and ‘everyday practices’: An analysis of extreme right and Islamic State women-only forums

IF 2.5 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Y. Veilleux-Lepage, Alexandra Phelan, A. Lokmanoglu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract A growing amount of literature is being devoted to interrogating gendered dynamics in both violent extremism and terrorism, contributing to the integration of international and feminist security. This includes how such dynamics can shape differences in the motivations and participation of women and men. By critically analysing ideological gender constructs in two women-only extremist forums – the Women's Forum on Stormfront.org and Women Dawah, a Turkish-language pro-Islamic State group chat on Telegram – and employing feminist methodology, this article demonstrates how gendered online spaces influence women's ‘everyday practices’ within extremist movements. We argue that women-only online spaces not only facilitate gendered practices by allowing women to share everyday experiences, hold ideological discussions, and engage in debate, but also provide an important means to navigate these issues within the movement itself. In fact, women-only forums are actively used by women within extremist movements to exert greater agency in the face of otherwise constraining gendered ideological constructs. In turn, gendered everyday practices are reinforced by virtual communities that strengthen a sense of meaning – and purpose – in the movement, albeit being ideologically confined to the private sphere in many ways. This study sheds light not only on the differences in participation between women and men, but also on how such virtual communities can serve as spaces to frame and reinforce gendered practices in extremist movements. This has key implications for deradicalisation and disengagement strategies, which are at present overwhelmingly gender neutral. We provide evidence of how women navigate agency in these spaces, while challenging the stereotype that women in extremist movements are typically passive actors confined to traditional roles.
性别激进化和“日常实践”:对极右翼和伊斯兰国女性论坛的分析
摘要越来越多的文献致力于探讨暴力极端主义和恐怖主义中的性别动态,为国际安全和女权主义安全的融合做出贡献。这包括这种动态如何影响男女在动机和参与方面的差异。通过批判性地分析两个仅限女性的极端主义论坛——Stormfront.org上的女性论坛和Telegram上的土耳其语亲伊斯兰国团体聊天women Dawah——中的意识形态性别结构,并运用女权主义方法,本文展示了性别化的网络空间如何影响极端主义运动中女性的“日常行为”。我们认为,女性专用的在线空间不仅通过允许女性分享日常经历、进行意识形态讨论和参与辩论来促进性别化实践,而且还为在运动本身中解决这些问题提供了重要手段。事实上,极端主义运动中的妇女积极利用妇女专用论坛,在其他方面限制性别意识形态结构的情况下发挥更大的作用。反过来,虚拟社区强化了性别化的日常实践,增强了运动的意义感和目的感,尽管在意识形态上在很多方面都局限于私人领域。这项研究不仅揭示了女性和男性在参与方面的差异,还揭示了这种虚拟社区如何成为框架和加强极端主义运动中性别化做法的空间。这对目前绝大多数不分性别的去极端化和脱离接触战略具有关键意义。我们提供了女性如何在这些空间中驾驭机构的证据,同时挑战了极端主义运动中的女性通常是局限于传统角色的被动行为者的刻板印象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
13.60%
发文量
30
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