Publication | Open Access
Homegrown Violent Extremism in Trinidad and Tobago: Local Patterns, Global Trends
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2016
Year
Lateral ViolenceHomegrown Violent ExtremismNationalismLocal PatternsViolent CrimeInternational RelationsViolent ExtremismSociologyGlobal TrendsSocial SciencesSocial ChangeMilitant IslamismArtsTerrorism FinancingPolitical ConflictPolitical ScienceAl Qaeda
The article examines the subject of homegrown violent extremism related to militant Islamism in the dual-Island Caribbean state of Trinidad and Tobago (T & T). It employs original research drawn from a series of semi-structured interviews and focus groups conducted between November 2015 and January 2016. Tracing the evolution of endogenous forms of radicalism and extremism the article considers how globalized-exogenous forms of militant Islamism associated with Al Qaeda and its offshoots, such as the so-called Islamic State, have impacted local patterns of violent extremism. The case study draws attention to a state and a region that have received scant attention in terrorism studies. As demonstrated by the article, this oversight is imprudent. There are a number of noteworthy findings from this case study for terrorism studies scholars: the unique historical legacy of radicalism, extremism and insurrection among T & T's Islamists; the country's markedly high levels of extremist travelers on a per capita basis and the high rate of religious converts among those travelers; the inter-linkages between criminality and political violence; and the potential threat posed by Trinidadian and Tobagonian militancy regionally.