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[Commlist] Cfp: Unraveling Violence, Gendered Extremism: CMC
Wed May 01 15:13:32 GMT 2024
/Call for papers: **/
**
*Special Issue on **Unraveling Violence, Gendered Extremism:
Interdisciplinary and Global Perspectives and Challenges*
The Journal /Crime Media Culture
//https://journals.sagepub.com/home/cmc/<https://journals.sagepub.com/home/cmc>//
What constitutes violent extremism? Could violent extremism ever be
considered a legitimate social reaction? Would critical analyses on
gender provide a better understanding of extremism when we turn towards
the so-called Global South? Can we explore the cultural alienation
processes that generate gendered extremism violence in a mediatized
global context? This call for papers titled “Unraveling Violence,
Gendered Extremism” aims to explore the ways in which gender is used to
explain and narrate extremist violence such as terrorism and mass
violence events like rampage killings.
This special Issue of the Journal /Crime Media Culture/ is seeking to
collect interdisciplinary perspectives on the intersections of violent
extremism, cultural dynamics of history, space and politics, and power
and legitimacy. As guest editors, we hope to challenge taken for granted
definitions of violence extremism and extremist violence, the gendered
characteristics of those who commit it, as well as how gender is
discursively, politically and strategically, used to construct,
understand, and diffuse extremist violence in different contexts.
Though scholars in policing, criminal justice and even in some social
scientific studies claim that most of what is considered extremist
attacks are perpetrated by men, and explanations of the violence tend to
posit it as an aberration that is intrinsically linked to dominant
expressions of masculinity ( Kalish and Kimmel 2010), these leave many
of the current cases unanswered. In the aftermath of 9/11, violent
extremism was mainly associated with ideological factors that attract
men and women to join Islamist groups, and thus positioned these men and
women as culturally alienated, and simplified in the dichotomy of global
conflicts (for example, Bakker 2006, Sageman 2008, van den Bos 2020).
Such alienation suggests that violent extremism is morally
reprehensible, and relegates it to other people, despite the ubiquity of
violence globally. Elsewhere, scholars note different motivations for
violence such as relative deprivation, political corruption, and
competition over natural resources Banunle and Apau 2019, and Khan, Khan
and Ahmed, 2022). Studies on violent extremism in Kenya for instance
note that although most violent extremists are men, idealized
masculinity does not appear to be significant motivators (Allen et. al.,
2015). Research in Malaysia challenges the discursive framing of Muslim
women as “jihadi brides,” and points to the complexity of recruitment of
women into terrorism and examining human trafficking and grooming of
young women ( Abdul Hamid 2024).
The divergent perspectives present a challenge to understanding what is
called violent extremism, who perpetrates it, and under what conditions,
as well as the social and cultural context in which the violence and
knowledge about violence are embedded.
The issue seeks to explore unpresented ways in which gender is (or
should be) used as an analytical lens to explain extremist violence and
trouble the normative theoretical frameworks of violent extremism. We
are seeking contributions exploring the scope and intersection of
race/ethnic identity, gender, class and geopolitics to understand what
is contextually considered extremist and to how such understandings are
discursively hegemonic.
We welcome submissions that delve into gender and violent extremism
through Indigenous, global South, and queer theoretical lenses.
Additionally, we invite submissions that employ qualitative research
methods, including opensource data analysis, digital methodologies,
interviews, and ethnographic studies. Interdisciplinary contributions
from the social sciences and humanities are highly encouraged, and
scholars specializing in anthropology, sociology, geography, and
criminology are particularly invited to submit their work.
*Submission timeline**:*
Abstract submissions: May 30, 2024
June 15, 2024 Abstracts accepted, and authors notified
Aug 25, 2024 Full articles submitted for peer review
September, 2024 Authors notified of review outcome
November 2024 Final article submission – for proofs
Abstracts should be between 300-500 words, excluding references (which
should be provided in Harvard format). All abstracts require
accompanying author biographies of 100 words. Both must be sent in Word
or PDF format to Sara Salman,
(sara.salman /at/ vuw.ac.nz)<mailto:(sara.salman /at/ vuw.ac.nz)>.
Authors of accepted abstracts shall submit the full draft paper (word
count around 6000-8000 words) by 25 Aug, 2024. All articles will be
double blind peer reviewed. There are no fees payable for publication.
If you have any further questions please email Sara Salman,
(sara.salman /at/ vuw.ac.nz)<mailto:(sara.salman /at/ vuw.ac.nz)>.
Guest editors:
Sara Salman, PhD (She/Her)
Senior Lecturer in Criminology
Institute of Criminology | Te Pou Haratūtanga
Victoria University of Wellington | Te Herenga Waka
New Zealand | Aotearoa
Dr Veronika Nagy, PhD
Assistant Professor in Criminology
Utrecht University
The Netherlands
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