Radicalism
In: Political and Philosophical Debates in Welfare, S. 169-194
In: Political and Philosophical Debates in Welfare, S. 169-194
In: Political theology, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 107-109
ISSN: 1743-1719
In: Problems of communism, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 117
ISSN: 0032-941X
In: Red Scotland!, S. 206-211
In: Radical Americas, Band 2, Heft 1
ISSN: 2399-4606
The means by which the United States sought to identify radicals and radicalism in the inter-war years has been largely hidden by a scholarship that has, instead, chosen to focus on processes of Americanization. By analysing hitherto hidden and underused archival sources, this essay examines the ways in which the American Legion positioned itself to become the single most important lobbying force in the identification of inter-war radicalism in the USA, used its considerable resources to sustain a vigorous programme to identify radicalism which served its own organizational interests, and, therefore, had a significant and meaningful impact on debates over radicalism and Americanism at local, state and national levels. The Legion reacted to a changing climate which saw radicalism identified first as an external, immigrant-led threat in the early 1920s, and then as an internal, home-grown menace as the 1930s drew on. That saw the organization grapple with questions including the innate intelligence of immigrants, as debates raged over whether radicals were lured unwittingly into that radicalism or chose radicalism because of a fiendish acumen. Throughout the period, the Legion's view of radicalism was deeply subjective, but was disseminated – and all too regularly accepted – with a polished veneer of objectivity that belied the often vituperative national debates that surrounded ideas of radicalism.
In: Policy review: the journal of American citizenship, Heft 30, S. 20-27
ISSN: 0146-5945
THE MOST GLARING EXCEPTION TO THE TIMES'S OTHERWISE EXEMPLARY COVERAGE HAS BEEN ITS TREATMENT OF COMMUNIST MOVEMENTS AND REGIMES IN THEIR EARLY STAGES. FROM STALIN IN THE 1930S, TO FIDEL CASTRO IN 1957 AND 1958, TO HO CHI MINH AND THE VIET CONG IN THE LATE 1960S AND EARLY 1970S, TO THE SANDINISTAS IN NICARAGUA FROM 1979 TO 1982, THE TIMES HAS ROMANTICIZED COMMUNIST LEADERS, SOMETIMES EVEN DENYING THEIR MARXISM ITSELF AND THEIR CONNECTIONS TO THE SOVIET UNION. IN THE LAST TWO DECADES THE TIMES HAS GIVEN FAR MORE ATTENTION TO THE REPRESSION UNDER RIGHT-WING DICTATORSHIPS THAN TO THE OFTEN MORE SANGUINARY CONSEQUENCES OF COMMUNIST TAKEOVERS. THIS HAS UNDERMINED THE LEGITIMACY OF THE UNITED STATES' ANTICOMMUNIST FOREIGN POLICY AND ADVANCED THE INTERESTS OF LEFT-WING TOTALITARIANISM IN THE WORLD.
In: Radical philosophy: a journal of socialist and feminist philosophy, Heft 103, S. 6-11
ISSN: 0300-211X
In: Organization: the interdisciplinary journal of organization, theory and society, Band 15, Heft 6, S. 915-921
ISSN: 1461-7323
Brennan and Hamlin provide a normative justification for dispositional conservatism based on the concave value functions which give rise to quasi-risk aversion. This note modifies this argument for "analytic conservatism" by allowing jurisdictional exit i
BASE
In: Religion and International Security
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Tables -- 1 Penetrating the Clandestine Veil -- 2 The Origin of Hizb ut-Tahrir -- 3 Exporting HT to Britain -- 4 Defining HT Radicalisation -- 5 Radical Pathways I: Profiles of Male HT Members -- 6 Radical Pathways II: Profiles of Female HT Members -- 7 Radicalisation: 'It's in the demographics' -- 8 A Conveyor Belt for Terrorism? -- 9 Demystifying the Schemata of HT Radicalisation -- Bibliography -- Index.
World Affairs Online
In: Que sais-je? 761
In: History workshop journal: HWJ, Band 83, Heft 1, S. 226-229
ISSN: 1477-4569
In: The current digest of the post-Soviet press, Band 68, Heft 31, S. 12-13
In: Strategic trends: key developments in global affairs, S. 45-62
World Affairs Online