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[Chapter 3 discusses the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the international and national responses to the attacks and the emergence of the ‘war on terror’. The second half of the chapter documents the existence of state crimes in the ‘war on terror’, through exploring state practices and state crimes in relation to counter-terrorism legislation, Guantánamo Bay and Abu Gharib prisons and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. It demonstrates how these state practices and state crimes have impacted the micro-individual-emotional level and therefore the variables associated with radicalization.]
Published: Apr 23, 2020
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