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The International Spectator: Italian Journal of International Affairs

Volume 43, Issue 3, 2008

Time to Deradicalise? The European Roots of Muslim Radicalisation

Time to Deradicalise? The European Roots of Muslim Radicalisation

DOI:
10.1080/03932720802280636
Amel Boubekeur

pages 85-99

Available online: 20 Aug 2008

Abstract

When European Muslim citizens are involved in social conflicts or when they contest the place that is given them in Europe, these political claims are often seen as radical and inspired by external influences. If an attempt is made to understand what part the influences of the so-called Muslim “countries of origin” play in the way Muslims contest European models of society and integration, it turns out that the roots of radicalisation are often purely European. The idea that it is the Islamic and communitarian nature of the European Muslim way of life which is at the base of their failing integration has to be challenged. Indeed, the initiatives of religious actors have failed to channel the radicalisation of European Muslims’ political demands. The role of the religious variable is of much less importance in political radicalisation than the lack of an institutional response to the demands for greater social and economic integration.

 

Details

  • Available online: 20 Aug 2008

Author biographies

Amel Boubekeur is the head of the Islam and Europe programme at the Centre for European Policy Studies, Brussels, and a Research Fellow at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and the Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris. Email:

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group