2020
DOI: 10.1080/00380237.2020.1782791
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Exploring Subcultural Trajectories: Racist Skinhead Disengagement, Desistance, and Countercultural Value Persistence

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…This is also reflected in the prevalence of identity in empirical writings, which reaches almost 50%. In essence, extremist identities have been described both as malleable and as resistant (Ferguson & McAuley, 2020; Madfis & Vysotsky, 2020). On one hand, research revealed that individuals can, and often do, stop identifying with the extremist movement (Barrelle, 2014; K.…”
Section: Comparison and Contrastmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is also reflected in the prevalence of identity in empirical writings, which reaches almost 50%. In essence, extremist identities have been described both as malleable and as resistant (Ferguson & McAuley, 2020; Madfis & Vysotsky, 2020). On one hand, research revealed that individuals can, and often do, stop identifying with the extremist movement (Barrelle, 2014; K.…”
Section: Comparison and Contrastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leaving extremism, however, does not necessarily entail a clean break with those identities. In fact, identity change in the context of violent extremism rarely takes the shape of a complete and utter changeover, but is rather associated with incomplete or partial shifts (Madfis & Vysotsky, 2020; Simi et al, 2017). Some authors would even argue that an extremist identity can never be fully erased or discarded (Simi et al, 2017; Ferguson & McAuley, 2020).…”
Section: Comparison and Contrastmentioning
confidence: 99%
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