ABSTRACT

This volume provides an overview of intervention and management strategies for dealing with terrorist and extremist offenders in prisons.

The management of terrorist and extremist prisoners has long been recognised as a difficult problem in prisons. In most countries, such offenders are relatively rare, but when their numbers increase these prisoners can undermine the effectiveness and safety of the prison system. At a global level there is an increasing recognition of the problem of militant jihadi extremists in prison and their ability to recruit new members among other prisoners. The numbers of such prisoners are low but growing and, as a result, prisons are becoming centres of radicalisation; indeed, in some cases, terrorist plots appear to have been based entirely on networks that were radicalised in prison.

This volume presents an expertly informed assessment of what we know about terrorists, extremists and prison, exploring the experience of a wide range of countries and of different political movements. Drawing critical lessons from historical case studies, the book examines critical issues around management strategies, radicalisation and deradicalisation, reform, risk assessment, as well as post-release experiences. The role that prisoners play in the conflicts beyond the jail walls is also examined, with case studies illustrating how prisoners can play a critical role in bringing about a peace process or alternatively in sustaining or even escalating campaigns of violence.

Written by leading experts in the field, this volume will be of much interest to students of terrorism/counter-terrorism, criminology, security studies and IR in general.

part I|32 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|13 pages

Terrorists, Extremists and Prison

An introduction to the critical issues

chapter 2|17 pages

“To Punish, Deter and Incapacitate”

Incarceration and radicalisation in UK prisons after 9/11

part II|53 pages

Radicalisation, de-radicalisation and disengagement

chapter 4|13 pages

From Criminals to Terrorists

The US experience of prison radicalisation

chapter 5|15 pages

The Talking Cure?

Communication and psychological impact in prison de-radicalisation programmes

chapter 6|11 pages

A Time to Think, A Time to Talk

Irish Republican prisoners in the Northern Irish peace process

part III|70 pages

Critical issues in management, risk assessment and reform

chapter 7|19 pages

The Healthy Identity Intervention

The UK's development of a psychologically informed intervention to address extremist offending

chapter 9|22 pages

Violent Extremist Risk Assessment

Issues and applications of the VERA-2 in a high-security correctional setting

chapter 10|13 pages

The Israeli Experience of Terrorist Leaders in Prison

Issues in radicalisation and de-radicalisation

part IV|99 pages

Key case studies

chapter 12|14 pages

Saudi Arabia's “Soft” Approach to Terrorist Prisoners

A model for others?

chapter 15|16 pages

Radicalisation, Recidivism and Rehabilitation

Convicted terrorists and Indonesian prisons

chapter 16|13 pages

The Red Army Faction Prisoners in West Germany

Equal treatment or unfairly tough?

chapter 17|13 pages

Prison Policy as an Anti-Terrorist Tool

Lessons from Spain

part V|26 pages

Post-release experiences

chapter 18|11 pages

Do Leopards Change Their Spots?

Probation, risk assessment and management of terrorism-related offenders on licence in the UK 1

chapter 19|13 pages

Northern Irish Ex-Prisoners

The impact of imprisonment on prisoners and the peace process in Northern Ireland