Spaces, Ties, and Agency: The Formation of Radical Networks
Spaces, Ties, and Agency: The Formation of Radical Networks
The literature on radicalization as well as studies on participation in high-risk activism have emphasized the roleof personal ties and radical networks in shaping pathways towards political violence. Yet, our knowledge abouthow these radical networks are formed remains limited. Drawing on an in-depth case study of the network aroundthe so-called “Sauerland-Group” in Germany, this article examines patterns of network-formation, focusing on: (i)the role and function of different types of social ties in creating and sustaining radical networks; (ii) the importanceof different spaces and events in initiating and reinforcing connections between activists; and (iii) the role ofindividual agency and pro-active connection-making in this process. In a more general sense, this article seeks tocontribute to a better understanding of radicalization as a relational process, emphasizing the fact that individualtrajectories are closely interlinked with radical networks as the dynamic setting of jihadist micro-mobilization.This network facilitates and shapes pathways into violent activism and at the same time is created and constantlyre-shaped by militant activists.