1st Edition

Radicalization and Disengagement in Neo-Nazi Movements Social Psychology Perspective

By Christer Mattsson, Thomas Johansson Copyright 2022
160 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

160 Pages
by Routledge

This book offers an in-depth study of personal accounts of men and women who have at one time entered, participated in and ultimately exited the neo-Nazi movement, with a focus on advanced Western states.   Through detailed stories of the movement’s violence, hatred, and ideology, coupled with narratives of the individuals’ life plans and dreams when entering the movement and reintegrating... Read more

1. Contextualizing the book  2. Method, methodology and theoretical perspectives  3. From rowdy skinheads to middle-aged parents  4. Geographies of hate and childhood memories  5. Schooling and radicalization  6. Violence and masculinity  7. Changing attitudes toward violence and ideology 8. Disengaging from the neo-Nazi movement  9. The desire to belong: the ethos of neo-Nazism  10. Conspiracy theories—At the heart of the neo-Nazi movement   11. Conclusions  12. Appendix: the informants

Biography

Christer Mattsson is the director of the Segerstedt Institute at University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He is the coauthor, with Thomas Johansson, of Life Trajectories into and out of Contemporary Neo-Nazism: Becoming and Unbecoming the Hateful Other (2020).

Thomas Johansson is professor of pedagogy, at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.