The topics of extremism, violent extremism, and radicalization leading to terrorism have constituted an increasingly prominent area of policy interest and donor support in recent years, globally and in the western Balkans. Counterterrorism initiatives, as well as efforts to prevent and counter violent extremism (P/CVE), often reveal the need for broader reform, peacebuilding, and democratization strategies. While foreign donors and domestic authorities tend to focus on ISIS-inspired violent jihadism, in many countries in the region, and particularly in the case of Serbia, there are other forms of extremism—namely far-right nationalism, violent hooliganism, and neo-Nazi movements—that are often considered to be more of an imminent threat, particularly as they are often viewed as examples of “normalized” political expression. The dynamics of reciprocal radicalization, in which competing extremisms feed off of, reinforce, and even need one another, can create seemingly intractable conflict spirals of escalation and violence. This volume explores these dynamics in Serbia through original research, taking fresh perspectives that demonstrate that Serbia is vulnerable to many types of extremism, which can best be prevented by achieving the liberal, democratic, rights-based reforms that have remained elusive for more than two decades. This broad and holistic approach is important for Serbia and its neighbors as the security lens through which most research has been focused to date has done little to explain the deep and structural dynamics of radicalization and extremism in the region.
Valery Perry
Boris Milanović
Ana Dević
Kristina Ivanović
Davor Marko
Miloš Milenković
Tijana Rečević
Nike Wentholt
| Delivery time | Delivery time 2-3 working days. |
| Edited by | Valery Perry |
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| Contributions by | Boris Milanović , Ana Dević , Kristina Ivanović , Davor Marko , Miloš Milenković , Tijana Rečević , Nike Wentholt |
| Number of Pages | 374 |
| Publication date | 30.04.2019 |
| Language | English |
| Type | Paperback |
| Format | 8,3 in x 5,8 in |
| ISBN | 978-3-8382-1260-9 |
| Weight | 487 g |
| Product safety information (EU GPSR) | read more |
“Valery Perry’s edited volume on violence and extreme ideologies in Serbia comes as a breath of much-needed fresh air. Such research has become increasingly rare, not only when it comes to Serbia, but in regard to the successor states of Yugoslavia in general; thus I was eager to read this publication. […] I look forward to seeing other scholars dealing with the Balkans produce a similar volume focusing on neighbouring states; the volume under review could be used as a building block. I fully recommend Perry’s edited volume to readers interested in how violence and extremism have remained a part of Serbian society since the bloody (post-)Yugoslav conflicts of the 1990s.”-Srdan Mladenov Jovanovic, Südosteuropa 68 (2020), no. 2
"While the pairing of ‘extremism’ and ‘violent extremism’ as separate analytical terms is a phenomenon of the policy landscape of the 2010s, the movements and ideologies surveyed in Valery Perry’s volume are largely the latest incarnations of developments that scholars of Serbian nationalism have observed for some time. The discourses of historical revisionism, Islamophobia and demographic panic mobilised by the public figures and anonymous internet users analysed in this volume have been resilient enough to sustain a place in the Serbian public sphere ever since the nationalist intellectual turn of the mid-1980s, incorporating the 1990s’ wars into their narratives, adapting to new social transformations, such as the rise of LGBTQ activism, and finding symbiotic mutual interests with the Serbian state."— Catherine Baker, Europe-Asia Studies, 73:2