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
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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.