Other News
Jennifer Philippa Eggert admitted to Princeton University as a Visiting Student Research Collaborator
Congratulations to Jennifer Philippa Eggert, who has been admitted to the Graduate School of Princeton University where she will conduct research on female fighters during the Lebanese civil war, for one month in April 2017, as a Visiting Student Research Collaborator. During her visit, Jennifer will be based in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs where she will collaborate with Prof. Dr. Jacob Shapiro who is a leading conflict and terrorism scholars and Co-Director of the Empirical Studies of Conflict Project at Princeton. Her visit will be funded by the DTC at 91福利.
Dr Trevor McCrisken Associate Professor of US Politics and International Studies, Dr Alexander Smith Assistant Professor in Sociology, Dr Ben Margulies Research Fellow in the Politics and International Studies and Dr Georg Lofflmann, Teaching Fellow in the Politics and International Studies give their expert insights into the marathon presidential campaigns culminating in today's vote.
Trevor McCrisken Appears in the Media Covering the US Election
, Associate Professor, US Politics and International Studies, is making a number of media appearances this week, covering the US Presidential Election.
Pre-election
Dr McCrisken was interviewed on Monday on the Trish and Jo Breakfast Show on BBC Coventry & 91福利shire Radio. You can listen at the following link: . The interview starts at the 1h19m mark.
Henry Riley of the RAW Speech Department interviewed Trevor McCrisken to get his academic view on the US Election:
On election day, Trevor appeared on , being interviewed by Shiulie Ghosh:
Post-election
Dr McCrisken appeared on Al Jazeera following Donald Trump's victory:
Another appearence on TRT World, followed:
Rhys Crilley has article published in Critical Studies on Terrorism
PAIS Teaching Fellow has had an article published in Critical Studies on Terrorism. The paper is co-authored with Raquel da Silva, a colleague from the University of Birmingham, and it contributes to current debates about everyday narratives of security.
Specifically, the article explores how members of the public answer the question ‘Why do British citizens join the conflict in Syria’ on social media sites and in response to online news articles. The authors argue that online comments are important in producing the discursive environment for making sense of British foreign fighters and what should be done in response to them.
One of the major findings is that there is a tendency to view British foreign fighters as being purely motivated by religion, and there is also a belief that British foreign fighters should be responded to through exceptional measures.
The paper discusses the implications of such perceptions, and the authors highlight how problematic misconceptions about Islam and Muslims are not just disseminated through elite and media discourse, but through everyday narratives published by members of the public online.
The article can be viewed at


