{"id":28767,"date":"2016-09-20T12:45:36","date_gmt":"2016-09-20T02:45:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=28767"},"modified":"2016-09-20T12:45:36","modified_gmt":"2016-09-20T02:45:36","slug":"religion-violence-university-response","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/religion-violence-university-response\/","title":{"rendered":"Religion and violence: the university response"},"content":{"rendered":"
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In July 2016, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called on his counterterrorism advisers<\/a> to investigate the mental state of potential \u2018lone-wolf\u2019 terrorists. Two months later, Ihsas Khan was charged with a terrorism offence for the allegedly Daesh-inspired knife attack<\/a> on a grandfather in Minto. Khan had previously been before the courts on larceny and malicious property damage charges, and ordered to undertake a course of psychiatric medication<\/a>.<\/p>\n At the same time, some political and community leaders, alongside journalists, are showing moral confusion about the correct form of relationship between Australia\u2019s approximately 500,000 Muslim citizens and their fellow Australians. The country\u2019s military forces, including some Muslim personnel, have been at war with Muslim extremists in the Middle East since 2001.<\/p>\n If ever universities had a role to play in studying and explaining violence in the Australian society, now is it. The Vice Chancellor of University of Southern Queensland, Jan Thomas, made an appeal to universities across the Commonwealth<\/a> to become more directly involved in mentoring students who might be vulnerable to terrorist recruitment during her Chairman\u2019s address to the Association of Commonwealth Universities in July.<\/p>\n The Australian Catholic University is home to two impressive sets of work on the topic, one by Joshua Roose (Political Islam and Masculinity: Muslim Men in Australia<\/a> 2016) and one by Lazar Stankov on the psychology of extremist mindsets<\/a>. The latter is exactly what Turnbull seems to be calling for. Jan Ali at the University of Western Sydney has also undertaken valuable community-based surveys.<\/p>\n With support from the federal government, ANU scholar Dr Clarke Jones and Deakin University\u2019s Professor Greg Barton set up the Australian Intervention Support Hub to promote evidence-based research on counter-radicalisation in August 2015.<\/p>\n ANU\u2019s National Security College (NSC), a joint initiative of the university and the federal government, has also stepped up its work in the recent past. In 2014, former government official and law graduate Teneille Elliott started a landmark PhD investigation at the NSC into Australian counterterrorism policy responses. She\u2019s currently studying how we can evaluate the effectiveness and appropriateness of the Australian government\u2019s approach to countering violent extremism and combatting potential terrorism at home. By my estimation, this is the first university-based multi-year evaluation of policy responses in many years.<\/p>\n Yet pockets of excellence such as this don\u2019t address all of the important national research needs as identified by the scholars themselves, or even those specifically identified by the Prime Minister in July. There hasn\u2019t been any sustained surge in related university research on domestic violent extremism since 9\/11. Many academics in the field see the amount of funding provided to this research as woefully inadequate and intermittent.<\/p>\n