Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu
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Prevention politics in non-Western contexts
Training imams in post- revolutionary Tunisia
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This chapter explores the influence of the international prevention discourse on local practices in the Tunisian context, with particular attention paid to how the concept of vulnerability legitimises the creation of suspect communities or categories of individuals. While the debate on Western preventing violent extremism (PVE) programmes and their outcomes has flourished in the last decade, non-Western PVE programmes have been analysed to a lesser extent. To fill this gap, this chapter looks at local associations working with imams in preventing and addressing processes of radicalisation in Tunisia. Through interviews with local non-governmental organisations and imams, the chapter explores whether and how the international discourse on security and vulnerability influenced the creation of local PVE programmes focusing on religious education, and whether these programmes led to the exclusion or differential inclusion of imams or supposedly vulnerable individuals in the country. The relevance of this study goes beyond the Tunisian case. While it is impossible to generalise from a single case study, studying the nexus of the international vulnerability discourse and the evolution of local processes of inclusion or exclusion of specific social groups shows us potential flaws in prevention programmes, while suggesting future avenues for avoiding marginalisation and discrimination in Tunisian PVE.

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Vulnerability

Governing the social through security politics

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