Admission requirements
- Only students of the MSc Crisis and Security Management can take this course.
Description
Experimental research allows the researcher to maintain a high level of control over an
environment, creating the necessary conditions for causal relationships between
variables to be established. In the study of radicalisation, however, it is challenging to
establish this level of control over what is ultimately a process of increasingly
perceiving violence to be an instrumental means of political action. For this reason, one
finds that the field is overwhelmingly dominated by exploratory, descriptive, or quasi-experimental methodologies. While these approaches can and do offer initial, exploratory insight into the phenomenon of radicalisation, an overreliance ultimately impedes progression towards theoretical models that can infer causality. As the field moves towards informing counter-radicalisation interventions, experimental research has become increasingly policy-relevant.
This course will introduce students to the burgeoning field of experimental research in
radicalisation, drawing from social psychology, behavioural ecomonics and cognitive psychology. Throughout the course, contemporary methodological and ethical issues will be considered and each week, new sets of experimental methods and findings will be presented. The implications of these lines of enquiry for counter-terrorism policy and practice will be discussed.
Course objectives
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
Understand experimental research methodologies and distinguish them from other research designs.
Explain the relationship between evidence and theory, and contrast this with contemporary methodological challenges in the field of radicalisation research.
Appraise a broad range of experimental research and relate it to the work of practitioners tasked with preventing and countering radicalisation.
Develop a proposal which identifies ethical challenges.
Timetable
On the right side of programme front page of the studyguide you will find links to the website and timetables, uSis and Brightspace
Mode of instruction
This course consists of 7 seminars. Classes will be dedicated to lectures and group work. Students are required to participate actively in class discussion. Attendance is mandatory.
Attendance is mandatory. Students are only allowed to miss more than one lecture if there are special, demonstrable personal circumstances. The Board of Examiners, in consultation with the study advisors, will decide on such an exceptional exemption of mandatory attendance.
Total study load 140 hours:
21 Contact hours.
119 Self-study hours: reading, preparing lectures, assignments, etc
Assessment method
Assessment for this course is based on three assignments:
Mid-term assignment
30% of final grade
Grade can be compensated in case of a fail grade (< 5.50)
Resit not possible.
Group presentation
20% of final grade
Grade can be compensated in case of a fail grade (< 5.50)
Resit not possible.
Individual exam
50% of final grade
Grade cannot be compensated, a 5.50 is required to pass the course.
Resit is possible
Resit will take the same form
The calculated overall course grade must be at least 5.50 in order to pass the course. If the calculated overall course grade is lower than 5.50, students are also permitted to resit the 50% individual exam.
In the case of written assessment methods, the examiner can always initiate a follow-up conversation with the student to establish whether the learning objectives have been met.
Transitional arrangement
Please be aware that passed partial grades obtained in academic year 2023-2024 are no longer valid during academic year 2024-2025.
Reading list
The literature will consist of academic articles and policy documents, links to which will be provided in the syllabus.
Registration
*Please note, registration for block 4 electives will be organised by the OSC in a different way from the regular course registration for semester 2. More information about this will follow in the beginning of semester 2.
Contact
Dr Sarah L. Carthy s.l.carthy@fgga.leidenuniv.nl
Office hours by appointment