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Counter-radicalisation in UK higher education: a vernacular analysis of ‘vulnerability' and the prevent duty

Counter-radicalisation in UK higher education: a vernacular analysis of ‘vulnerability' and the prevent duty
Counter-radicalisation in UK higher education: a vernacular analysis of ‘vulnerability' and the prevent duty
The UK Government defines vulnerability to radicalisation as, ‘the process by which a person comes to support terrorism and extremist ideologies associated with terrorist groups’. Given this relationship between radicalisation and terrorism, in 2015 the UK Government passed legislation to enhance the national capacity to pre-emptively identify vulnerable people by co opting public sector workers. This responsibility (‘the Prevent duty’) has mandated the monitoring of citizen’s behaviours based on a relationship between vulnerability, radicalisation, and terrorism that is far from concrete. Despite this, the duty is presented as a clear and actionable framework designed to support frontline workers identify vulnerability and report cases of concern. It is within this context that our paper adopts a vernacular approach to present findings from focus groups and interviews with university students and staff about their comprehension, experiences, and evaluations of vulnerability and the duty. We approach these insights as valuable (but oft neglected) instances of ‘everyday’ security knowledge and argue that they are particularly valuable in the context of a duty that co opts those within Higher Education as counter-radicalisation practitioners and subjects. Our paper argues that conceptual, operational, and normative disconnects between Government policy and vernacular insights ‘on the ground’ mean that the duty assumes an uncertain position within UKHE to the detriment to of its stated objectives.
Prevent, Radicalisation , Vulnerability , Vernacular Security Studies, Terrorism , Higher Education
Whiting, Andrew
a587eaf0-17b1-4508-b1c6-4cdc4c4537e3
Spiller, Keith
d0ea9172-6ef6-4f80-9f34-2285b41ab237
Awan, Imran
40d444cb-e6f7-4100-b554-975b1eee8498
Whiting, Andrew
a587eaf0-17b1-4508-b1c6-4cdc4c4537e3
Spiller, Keith
d0ea9172-6ef6-4f80-9f34-2285b41ab237
Awan, Imran
40d444cb-e6f7-4100-b554-975b1eee8498

Whiting, Andrew, Spiller, Keith and Awan, Imran (2024) Counter-radicalisation in UK higher education: a vernacular analysis of ‘vulnerability' and the prevent duty. Critical Studies on Security. (doi:10.1080/21624887.2024.2313835).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The UK Government defines vulnerability to radicalisation as, ‘the process by which a person comes to support terrorism and extremist ideologies associated with terrorist groups’. Given this relationship between radicalisation and terrorism, in 2015 the UK Government passed legislation to enhance the national capacity to pre-emptively identify vulnerable people by co opting public sector workers. This responsibility (‘the Prevent duty’) has mandated the monitoring of citizen’s behaviours based on a relationship between vulnerability, radicalisation, and terrorism that is far from concrete. Despite this, the duty is presented as a clear and actionable framework designed to support frontline workers identify vulnerability and report cases of concern. It is within this context that our paper adopts a vernacular approach to present findings from focus groups and interviews with university students and staff about their comprehension, experiences, and evaluations of vulnerability and the duty. We approach these insights as valuable (but oft neglected) instances of ‘everyday’ security knowledge and argue that they are particularly valuable in the context of a duty that co opts those within Higher Education as counter-radicalisation practitioners and subjects. Our paper argues that conceptual, operational, and normative disconnects between Government policy and vernacular insights ‘on the ground’ mean that the duty assumes an uncertain position within UKHE to the detriment to of its stated objectives.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 January 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 April 2024
Published date: 10 April 2024
Keywords: Prevent, Radicalisation , Vulnerability , Vernacular Security Studies, Terrorism , Higher Education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486784
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486784
PURE UUID: c23f9f1b-cff0-40ca-9aab-6090da79b340
ORCID for Keith Spiller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5796-8165

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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2024 17:38
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 03:07

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Whiting
Author: Keith Spiller ORCID iD
Author: Imran Awan

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