The book provides a pentapartite theoretical analysis of socio-economic factors as the grand basis for the evolution of Boko Haram terrorism in Nigeria. It describes the terrorism as a by-product of unresolved conflict emanating from unequal hegemonic power exchange with respect to the non-fulfillment of socio-economic goals between the political state and the citizenry. Rather than follow the popular notion of religion as the root causes of Boko Haram crisis, the book widens its scope to cover terrorism as a whole with a view to laying a more viable foundation for its readers to understand the concept of terrorism, provoking causes and perspectives, as well as influential factors that may interplay to sustain extremist terrorism in contemporary global society. Using Boko Haram as a potentially useful model, the book contends that the discursive framework of terrorism cannot be isolated from its socio-economic perspectives. In view of the foregoing, the simplistic response to resolving terrorism crisis in Nigeria still lies at the heart of ameliorating the socio-economic conditions of the citizens via the political state. The book will be appropriate for individuals whose interests are vested on terrorism and homeland security, terrorism and counterterrorism studies, criminal justice and organized crime, terrorism and political violence, African politics, peace and conflict resolution as well as security and conflict management. Counter-terrorism experts, policy makers, academic scholars, intelligence and security operatives will also find this book resourceful. Ultimately, as interest in terrorism studies continues to grow exponentially among Sociologists, Anthropologists and Criminologists, it is my utmost quest to provide the most invaluable themes and updated theories in terrorism research for use by independent researchers, students and academics seeking to advance empirically and theoretically driven research in the fields of terrorism, homeland security and related crimes.
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The book provides a pentapartite theoretical analysis of socio-economic factors as the grand basis for the evolution of Boko Haram terrorism in Nigeria.
Chapter 1: General introduction and Analytical Explanation of Key Concepts in Terrorism StudiesChapter 2: Towards a Demystification of Pervasive Understanding Boko Haram TerrorismChapter 3: Patterns that Maintain the Boko Haram Terrorism in NigeriaChapter 4: Boko Haram Insurgency: Democratic Failure and Youth Degeneration into Terrorism in NigeriaChapter 5: Boko Haram Terrorism and Socio-economic Decays in NigeriaChapter 6: Community Policing as an Antidote for Terrorism: Lessons from Boko Haram Chapter 7: Theories and Perspectives on Terrorism: A Boko Haram Model AnalysisChapter 8: Methodology and Qualitative Research Strategy Chapter 9: Synopsis and general conclusions
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032490717
Publisert
2023-07-21
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
399 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
168

Biographical note

Sogo Angel Olofinbiyi is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Criminal Justice, School of Law, at the University of Venda, South Africa. He received his B.Sc. in Biological and Cultural Anthropology and M.Sc. in Sociology (Crime and Delinquency) from the University of Ibadan and University of Lagos respectively; and his PhD in Criminology and Forensic Studies from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. He is a South African National Research Foundation (NRF-Rated) Scholar and a life member of the International Criminology Association, International Society of Criminology, Canadian Criminal Justice Association, as well as Criminological and Victimological Society of Southern Africa. His research interests currently focus on a broad range of specializations encompassing terrorism and violence, crime and racism, biopsychosocial context of criminal behaviour, crime scene investigation, criminological theories, crime & deviance (with a particular focus on cybercrime, drug use, rape and prostitution), youth and adolescent delinquent behaviour and related offenses. He has supervised over 50 postgraduate students to his credit and taught a wide range of courses in criminology and criminal justice across different institutions on the African continent. He has published numerous scholarly articles in high-impact and accredited national and international journals, books, and chapters in books and presented high-quality papers at renowned international conferences around the world. Olofinbiyi has served as an external examiner to a sizeable number of higher education institutions across the world. He is a peer reviewer to numerous international journals and has also served as an editorial board member to an appreciable number of these journals. Sogo Angel Olofinbiyi is a multidisciplinary scholar with a strong passion for collaborative research work. He has also been an invited visiting scholar to the University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada.