10 research outputs found

    Explaining recruitment to extremism:A Bayesian hierarchical case-control approach

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    Who joins extremist movements? Answering this question is beset by methodological challenges as survey techniques are infeasible and selective samples pro- vide no counterfactual. Recruits can be assigned to contextual units, but this is vulnerable to problems of ecological inference. In this article, we elaborate a technique that combines survey and ecological approaches. The Bayesian hierarchical case-control design that we propose allows us to identify individual-level and contextual factors patterning the incidence of recruitment to extremism, while accounting for spatial autocorrelation, rare events, and contamination. We empirically validate our approach by matching a sample of Islamic State (ISIS) fighters from nine MENA countries with representative population surveys enumerated shortly before recruits joined the movement. High status individuals in their early twenties with university education were more likely to join ISIS. There is more mixed evidence for relative deprivation. The accompanying extremeR package provides functionality for applied researchers to implement our approach

    Al Qaeda and the Islamic State's Break: Strategic Strife or Lackluster Leadership?

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    Acknowledgement to reviewers of social sciences in 2019

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