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From Idea to Policy: Scandinavian Municipalities Translating Radicalization
2019 (English)In: Journal for Deradicalization, E-ISSN 2363-9849, Vol. 18, p. 38-73Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Radicalization has emerged as a dominant idea for understanding processes that lead to extremist beliefs and behavior. As societal efforts to counter extremism have become increasingly decentralized, local policymakers are being confronted with the task of making sense of radicalization. Departing from neo-institutional theory, this paper explores how the idea of radicalization has been materialized in 60 Scandinavian (Denmark, Norway and Sweden) municipal policies that share the explicit aim of countering extremism. Most research on how radicalization has been conceptualized in policy focuses on the international and national levels. Instead, this paper provides a first large number analysis of how radicalization has been understood at the local level. A content analysis of the policies highlights the different definitions, explanatory factors and theories, models and checklists utilized. Findings show the considerable variance between municipal translations of radicalization. In some cases, the processual properties usually attributed to radicalization are contested as radicalization is portrayed as a mere outcome. A total of 66 different explanatory factors for radicalization are noticed by the municipalities, transforming most forms of deviant social and cultural statuses, psychological conditions and ideological positions to possible explanatory factors. Although the municipalities to a certain degree utilize the same labels for popular theories, models and checklists, this paper demonstrates that the content varies as they are transferred between contexts. The paper explains how and why such local variance occurs and which institutional elements that constrains translations of radicalization.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2019. Vol. 18, p. 38-73
Keywords [en]
Radicalization, Local Policymaking, Neo-institutional Theory
National Category
Public Administration Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-31366OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hb-31366DiVA, id: diva2:1830150
Available from: 2024-01-22 Created: 2024-01-22 Last updated: 2025-09-24Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Translating grand challenges into municipal organizing: Prevention of terrorism, extremism, and radicalization in Scandinavia
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Translating grand challenges into municipal organizing: Prevention of terrorism, extremism, and radicalization in Scandinavia
2022 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

This thesis investigates why and how municipalities organize to address grand challenges. Previous research shows that municipalities have increased their policymaking and organizing in relation to grand challenges, often without any national regulations forcing them to do so. The rationales, processes, and mechanisms underpinning this type of municipal voluntarism are understudied. The research is based on the case of Scandinavian municipalities and their efforts to prevent terrorism, extremism, and radicalization (TER). From playing a miniscule role in Scandinavian counter-terrorism policies until the 2010s, municipal employees such as teachers, social workers, and youth workers have in current practice become the backbone of the fight against TER. Municipalities generally have little or no strategic or practical experience of preventing TER, resulting in extensive uncertainty and ambiguity as to how to organize the relevant efforts. In this thesis, the process leading from grand challenge to municipal organizing is framed as a translation process. The analysis uses concepts from sociological institutional theory and social movement studies, and is informed by data from newspaper articles, municipal policies, interviews, and observations. The findings are presented in four papers. This thesis shows how the decentralization of a grand challenge from being an international or national to a municipal responsibility is a multi-layered, highly discursive translation process that is dependent on reframing a challenge as a local one. Regarding TER, the local frame was based on a new institutional vocabulary, triggered and legitimized by critical events, which elite actors used to localize the grand challenge. Once localized, institutional pressure was exerted on municipalities to organize preventive efforts. While institutional pressure caused rapid organizational activity, it also led to the ambiguous translation and editing of concepts and preventive approaches with unintended, paradoxical, and problematic consequences. Many of the observed organizing activities centered on rhetorical efforts to legitimize the challenge and its associated concepts and practices. This was a consequence of the grand challenge being contested locally, since it introduced a new institutional logic that conflicted with those dominating the local institutional context. 

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
University of Gothenburg, 2022. p. 268
Keywords
grand challenges, municipalities, counter-terrorism, new institutional theory, translation
National Category
Public Administration Studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-31371 (URN)978-91-987772-3-9 (ISBN)978-91-987772-4-6 (ISBN)
Available from: 2024-01-22 Created: 2024-01-22 Last updated: 2025-09-24Bibliographically approved

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