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Table of Contents
Part 1. Thinking About Right-wing Extremism in North America
Chapter 1. Introduction (Barbara Perry, Jeffrey Greunewald, Ryan Scrivens)
Chapter 2. Understanding Extremism: Frames of Analysis of the Far Right (Randy Blazak)
Chapter 3. Blurring the Boundaries of Mainstream and Extreme: Contexts and Contours of Right-wing Extremism in Canada (Barbara Perry)
Chapter 4. Trump and the Alt Right: The Mainstreaming of White Nationalism (Tanner Mirrlees)
Chapter 5. Asymmetric Coverage of Asymmetric Violence: How the U.S. Print News Media Report Far Right Terrorism (Erin M. Kearns and Allison Betus)
Chapter 6. Check All That Apply: Challenges in Tracking Ideological Movements That Motivate Far-Right Terrorism (Erin Miller, Elizabeth Yates, and Sheehan Kane)
Part 2. Diversity Within the Right-wing Extremist Movement
Chapter 7. We Are the News Now: The Role of Networked Conspiracy and the Quebec Tweetosphere in Shaping the Narrative around the Anti-COVID-19 Restrictions (Samuel Tanner and Aurelie Campana)
Chapter 8. By Ballot or by Bullet: Fantasies of Violence in the Patriot/Militia Movement in the United States (Sam Jackson)
Chapter 9. Birds of a feather: A comparative analysis of white supremacist and violent male supremacist discourses (Meredith Pruden, Ayse Lokmanoglu, Anne Peterscheck, and Dr Yannick Veilleux-Lepage)
Chapter 10. Theyre not all the same: a longitudinal comparison of violent and non-violent right-wing identities (Garth Davies, Ryan Scrivens, Tiana Gaudette, and Richard Frank)
Chapter 11. No Longer Alone: Lone Wolves, Wolf Packs and Made for Web TV Specials (Jeffrey Kaplan)
Part 3. Where the Action Is: Right-wing Extremist Activities
Chapter 12. Far Right Extremist Violence in the United States (Steven Chermak, Joshua Freilich, , William Parkin, Jeff Gruenewald, Colleen Mills, Brent Klein, Leevia Dillon, and Celinet Duran)
Chapter 13. Pathways to Hate: Applying an Integrated Social Control-Social Learning Model to Hate Violence by Far-Right Extremists (Colleen Mills)
Chapter 14. Far-Right Extremists Use of the Internet: Emerging Trends in the Empirical Literature (Ryan Scrivens, Tiana Gaudette, Maura Conway, and Thomas J. Holt)
Chapter 15. Far-Right Violence and Extremism Global Convergence(Arie Perliger and Michael Mills)
Chapter 16. The Nexus of Right-Wing Extremism and the Canadian Armed Forces (Philip McCristall, David C. Hofmann, and Shayna Perry)
Part 4. Responses to far-right extremism
Chapter 17. More than Walking Away: Barriers to Disengagement among Former White Supremacists (Steven Windisch, Pete Simi, Kathleen Blee, and Matthew DeMichele )
Chapter 18. Confronting Online Extremism: Strategies, Promises, and Pitfalls (James Hawdon and Matthew Costello)
19. Criminal Justice Responses To Right-Wing Extremist Violence In The United States (Jeff Gruenewald, Katie Ratcliff, and Hayden Lucas).
Chapter 1. Introduction (Barbara Perry, Jeffrey Greunewald, Ryan Scrivens)
Chapter 2. Understanding Extremism: Frames of Analysis of the Far Right (Randy Blazak)
Chapter 3. Blurring the Boundaries of Mainstream and Extreme: Contexts and Contours of Right-wing Extremism in Canada (Barbara Perry)
Chapter 4. Trump and the Alt Right: The Mainstreaming of White Nationalism (Tanner Mirrlees)
Chapter 5. Asymmetric Coverage of Asymmetric Violence: How the U.S. Print News Media Report Far Right Terrorism (Erin M. Kearns and Allison Betus)
Chapter 6. Check All That Apply: Challenges in Tracking Ideological Movements That Motivate Far-Right Terrorism (Erin Miller, Elizabeth Yates, and Sheehan Kane)
Part 2. Diversity Within the Right-wing Extremist Movement
Chapter 7. We Are the News Now: The Role of Networked Conspiracy and the Quebec Tweetosphere in Shaping the Narrative around the Anti-COVID-19 Restrictions (Samuel Tanner and Aurelie Campana)
Chapter 8. By Ballot or by Bullet: Fantasies of Violence in the Patriot/Militia Movement in the United States (Sam Jackson)
Chapter 9. Birds of a feather: A comparative analysis of white supremacist and violent male supremacist discourses (Meredith Pruden, Ayse Lokmanoglu, Anne Peterscheck, and Dr Yannick Veilleux-Lepage)
Chapter 10. Theyre not all the same: a longitudinal comparison of violent and non-violent right-wing identities (Garth Davies, Ryan Scrivens, Tiana Gaudette, and Richard Frank)
Chapter 11. No Longer Alone: Lone Wolves, Wolf Packs and Made for Web TV Specials (Jeffrey Kaplan)
Part 3. Where the Action Is: Right-wing Extremist Activities
Chapter 12. Far Right Extremist Violence in the United States (Steven Chermak, Joshua Freilich, , William Parkin, Jeff Gruenewald, Colleen Mills, Brent Klein, Leevia Dillon, and Celinet Duran)
Chapter 13. Pathways to Hate: Applying an Integrated Social Control-Social Learning Model to Hate Violence by Far-Right Extremists (Colleen Mills)
Chapter 14. Far-Right Extremists Use of the Internet: Emerging Trends in the Empirical Literature (Ryan Scrivens, Tiana Gaudette, Maura Conway, and Thomas J. Holt)
Chapter 15. Far-Right Violence and Extremism Global Convergence(Arie Perliger and Michael Mills)
Chapter 16. The Nexus of Right-Wing Extremism and the Canadian Armed Forces (Philip McCristall, David C. Hofmann, and Shayna Perry)
Part 4. Responses to far-right extremism
Chapter 17. More than Walking Away: Barriers to Disengagement among Former White Supremacists (Steven Windisch, Pete Simi, Kathleen Blee, and Matthew DeMichele )
Chapter 18. Confronting Online Extremism: Strategies, Promises, and Pitfalls (James Hawdon and Matthew Costello)
19. Criminal Justice Responses To Right-Wing Extremist Violence In The United States (Jeff Gruenewald, Katie Ratcliff, and Hayden Lucas).