Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 03/2012

Edges of Radicalization: Individuals, Networks and Ideas in Violent Extremism

Scott Helfstein

February 2012

The Combating Terrorism Center at West Point

Abstract

The Combating Terrorism Center (CTC) at West Point is pleased to announce the release of a new report entitled "Edges of Radicalization: Ideas, Individuals and Networks in Violent Extremism," by Scott Helfstein. This paper examines radicalization as a social phenomenon through the behavior of individuals and networks. Violent extremists, individuals pursuing political change through violence, remain committed to strike the U.S. homeland and its interests abroad. It is important to understand how radical ideas spread to counter or contain this immediate and persistent threat. This study argues that the spread of violent extremism cannot be fully understood as an ideological or social phenomenon, but must be viewed as a process that integrates the two forces in a coevolutionary manner. The same forces that make an ideology appealing to some aggrieved group of people are not necessarily the same factors that promote its transfer through social networks of self-interested human beings. This means that there is value in differentiating why radical ideologies resonate among individuals, and how individuals come to adopt and pass on ideas. Numerous implications can be derived from this report that help contextualize the current terrorist threat, the role technology may play in radicalization and next steps in decoding radicalization.