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Research Articles

“At least I tried, God damnit” and “Even a drop in the ocean is still more than nothing”: In their own words, what motivates people to work in P/CVE?

 

ABSTRACT

The P/CVE sector is a growing and increasingly professionalised field in many countries affected by “homegrown” extremism. While opinions of individuals working and researching in the P/CVE sector have informed many studies, little is known about these professionals as people. This is problematic, because P/CVE employees are not black boxes; they have personal motivations, opinions, and experiences, which potentially influence their work and therefore the development and implementation of prevention and counter-extremism efforts. The present study offers a preliminary glimpse into P/CVE professionals as individuals by reporting the analysis of 27 experts interviews with academics and practitioners working in P/CVE, who describe their personal motivation for working in this particular field. These motivational factors range from childhood experiences to personal interest in the topic, anger, the wish for a positive personal impact, the desire to use research to improve social ills, and personalised responsibility to protect democracy

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by a PhD scholarship from the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.

Notes on contributors

Linda Schlegel

Linda Schlegel is a PhD student at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, focusing on storytelling in P/CVE narrative campaigns in her research. She is also an Associate Fellow at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF), the Global Network on Extremism and Technology (GNET), and modus | Centre for Applied Research on Deradicalisation. Her research interests include (counter-) narratives, digitally-mediated radicalisation, and gamification.

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