000 01472cam a2200229 4500
001 46661
003 OSt
005 20240201133622.0
008 240131b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _c0
100 1 _aHUTCHINSON Jade
245 _aFrom flowers to far-right extremists:
_ba genealogy of ecology in terrorism and extremism studies/
_cJade Hutchinson
260 _c2023
520 _aThe idea that violent extremists inhabit an “ecosystem” of interrelated online spaces has been popularised by both scholars and practitioners in recent years. Drawing from the natural sciences, terrorism and extremism studies has sought to capitalise on the conceptual potential of ecology to understand otherwise perplexing natural and artificial environments. Yet, despite its popularisation, there remain fundamental gaps in understanding the benefits and limits of using ecology to analyse extremist communities dwelling in cyberspace. To be applied in a rigorous manner, it is essential that the intellectual tradition and tenets that underpin ecology in the natural and social sciences be explained.
598 _aECOLOGY, ECOSYSTEM,TERRORISM, NEWARTICLS
650 _aECOLOGY
_xECOSYSTEM
650 _aTERRORISM
773 _aCritical Studies On Terrorism:
_gVol. 16, No 3, September 2023, page: 427-451
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17539153.2023.2218156
_zClick here for full text
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE
945 _rY
_sY
999 _c46661
_d46661