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PART I. THEORETICAL AND CONCEPTUAL ADVANCES Chapter 1. Does deradicalization work?; John Horgan, Katharina Meredith, and Katerina Papatheodorou Chapter 2. Navigating radicalization concepts: a role for the harm principle; Keiran Hardy Chapter 3. Radicalization as transformative learning: a theoretical and illustrative exploration; Alex Wilner and Claire-Jehanne Dubouloz; Chapter 4. Advances in violent extremist risk analysis; Paul Gill, Zoe Marchment, Sanaz Zolghadriha, Nadine Salman, Bettina Rottweiler, Caitlin Clemmow, and Isabelle Van Der Vegt; PART II. STATE AND CIVIL SOCIETY Chapter 5. Counter-radicalization as civic integration; Therese o' Toole; Chapter 6. The role of state violence in the adoption of terrorism; Stephen Chicoine Chapter 7. The securitization of Muslim civil society in Canada; Fahad Ahmad; Chapter 8. Countering violent extremism, safeguarding and the law: a practitioner's perspective on protecting young and vulnerable people from exploitation; Carys Evans PART III. THE ONLINE SPACE AND RADICALIZATION Chapter 9. Clearing the smoke and breaking the mirrors: using attitudinal inoculation to challenge online disinformation by extremists; Kurt Braddock Chapter 10. Learning to hate: explaining participation in online extremism; James Hawdon and Matthew Costello Chapter 11. Hatred she wrote: a comparative topic analysis of extreme right and Islamic state women-only forums; Ayse Lokmanoglu and Yannick Veilleux-Lepage PART IV. FORMER EXTREMISTS, PREVENTION, AND PUNISHMENT Chapter 12. Former extremists in radicalization and counter-radicalization research; Ryan Scrivens, Steven Windisch, and Pete Simi; Chapter 13. Examining & prevent' from a former combatant perspective; Tom Pettinger Chapter 14. Engagement, desistance, and revolt: what do we know about terrorists who turn into informants?; Stefano Bonino Chapter 15. "We wouldn't let known terrorists live here": impediments to radicalization in western Canadian prisons; William Schultz, Sandra M. Bucerius, and Kevin D. Haggerty