Sagnik Dutta is Associate Professor at Jindal Global Law School, OP Jindal Global University. Tahir Abbas is Professor of Radicalisation Studies at the Institute of Security and Global Affairs at Leiden University. Sylvia I. Bergh is Associate Professor in Development Management and Governance at the International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam, and Senior Researcher at The Hague University of Applied Sciences.
'This edited collection is as timely as it is impressive. It showcases the work of international scholars working across a diverse range of disciplines, affording unusual breadth as well as remarkable depth. The book not only interrogates dominant approaches toward the study of terrorism and prevention of politically and religiously motivated violence from within the West, it proposes alternate and more inclusive perspectives, drawing across detailed case studies from countries in the Global South. In both charting and challenging the rise and consolidation of colonial epistemes in studies of terrorism, this landmark text will serve as a crucial inflection point. It is rare to find a collection that seamlessly blends together contributions from seasoned scholars with those offered by exciting and talented upcoming researchers. Further, this enterprise yields novelty and originality, as both conceptual and policy focussed similarities and differences are illuminated between the global North and the global South. A must read for academics, policy makers and those with a keen interest in security politics and international relations.' Professor Gabe Mythen, Department of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology/School of Law and Social Justice /University of Liverpool 'Global counterterrorism: A decolonial approach lays down an important challenge - if studies of counterterrorism begin with 9/11, then counterterrorism outside the Global North is sidelined in our analyses. Beginning with 9/11 also silences the important connections between imperial laws imposed to quash rebellion in the colonies and the pre-emptive counterterrorism regimes used today. Refreshingly, this important volume draws upon case studies from Egypt, India, Pakistan, as well France, Norway, Britain and the USA - decentring 9/11 and highlighting the colonial matrix of power which structures policing, racialised othering, and counterterrorism powers across the globe. Happily, the volume does also take a pluralist approach to theory and method, with feminist analyses, framing theory and discourse analysis making appearances alongside decolonial approaches. A wonderful and varied volume which should make an appearance on every course list.' Professor Charlotte Heath-Kelly, PAIS, University of Warwick -- .