12 research outputs found
Jihadi video and auto-radicalisation: evidence from an exploratory YouTube study
Large amounts of jihadi video content on YouTube along with the vast array of relational data that can be gathered opens up innovative avenues for exploration of the support base for political violence. This exploratory study analyses the online supporters of jihad-promoting video content on YouTube, focusing on those posting and commenting upon martyr-promoting material from Iraq. Findings suggest that a majority are under 35 years of age and resident outside the region of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) with the largest percentage of supporters located in the United States. Evidence to support the potential for online radicalisation is presented. Findings relating to newly formed virtual relationships involving a YouTube user with no apparent prior links to jihadists are discussed
Whatâs love got to do with it? Framing âJihadJaneâ in the US press
The purpose of this article is to compare and contrast the US press coverage accorded to female terrorist plotter, Colleen LaRose, with that of two male terrorist plotters in order to test whether assertions in the academic literature regarding media treatment of women terrorists stand up to empirical scrutiny. The authors employed TextSTAT software to generate frequency counts of all words contained in 150 newspaper reports on their three subjects and then slotted
relevant terms into categories fitting the commonest female terrorist frames, as identified by Nacosâs article in Studies in Conflict and Terrorism (2005). The authorsâ findings confirm that women involved in terrorism receive significantly more press coverage and are framed vastly
differently in the US press than their male counterparts
Combining social network analysis and sentiment analysis to explore the potential for online radicalisation
The increased online presence of jihadists has raised the possibility of individuals being radicalised via the Internet. To date, the study of violent radicalisation has focused on dedicated jihadist websites and forums. This may not be the ideal starting point for such research, as participants in these venues may be described as âalready madeup mindsâ. Crawling a global social networking platform, such as YouTube, on the other hand, has the potential to unearth content and interaction aimed at radicalisation of those with little or no apparent prior interest in violent jihadism. This research explores whether such an approach is indeed fruitful. We collected a large dataset from a group within YouTube that we identified as potentially having a radicalising agenda. We analysed this data using social network analysis and sentiment analysis tools, examining the topics discussed and what the sentiment polarity (positive or negative) is towards these topics. In particular, we focus on gender differences in this group of users, suggesting most extreme and less tolerant views among female users
The challenge of community participation in the delivery of public services exploring local participatory governance in Ireland
no abstract availabl
âBy the People, for the Peopleâ Bringing public participation back to politics
International best practice dictates that
policies impacting people should be
evidence-based, and that those most
affected are in the best position to explain
the needs that effective policies have to
meet. The problem is that people outside
academia rarely get to contribute to
research, and (apart from opinion surveys)
policy makers find it hard to understand
peopleâs true needs when they formulate
policy. Researchers in ULâs Department
of Politics and Public Administration have
addressed this problem by developing
participatory frameworks for public policy
design. Working in collaboration with
politicians, policy makers, community
groups and citizens, UL researchers have
found ways to collect the evidence needed
by state agencies, politicians and policy
makers to target policy interventions and
resources precisely where people most
need them.
In effect, ULâs researchers have become
translators between officialdom and
citizens, helping create collaborative
partnerships that provide for robust
evidence-based policy making. These
partnerships marshal the insights and
inputs of all policy stakeholders, and result
in policy that is more effective for all
From exclusion to inclusion? Reflections on the Celtic tiger
International (Considine & Giguere 2008) and Australian (Smyth, Reddel & Jones 2005) interest in the place of associations and partnerships to create more inclusive governance forms continues unabated. In this paper we trace the evolution of Irish partnership approaches by providing a brief summary of âflagshipâ partnership initiatives and the primary influences that led to their creation. In doing so, we note that there were a variety of external and internal impetuses towards partnershipâ at European, national and sub-national levels of governmentâwhich manifested themselves in different partnership projects at these different levels. As a result, despite sharing many common attitudes and approaches, these partnership initiatives inevitably reflected different policy aims and ambitions. The consequences for changes to Irish governmental systems were twofold. On the one hand, the fact that partnership was simultaneously promoted in a variety of government levels and policy arenas meant that its impact was widely felt across the system. On the other hand, this widespread experience of partnership served to reinforce a broader paradigm shift in organisation of public policy (which has subsequently been interpreted as an attitudinal and value shift in favour of partnership). As a result we argue that it is possible to conceive of the institutionalising of partnership approaches. Still, this institutionalisation is a process whereby we are seeing a gradual convergence of various partnership approaches into one generalised model. We argue that this convergence (the one partnership approach fits all), while simplifying governance arrangements, raises significant concerns regarding the efficacy and legitimacy of new governance approaches which themselves may prove counter-productive to the original aims of partnership