RT Article T1 Citizenship, belonging and attachment in the ‘war on terror’ JF Critical criminology VO 24 IS 1 SP 111 OP 125 A1 Ahmed, Shamila LA English YR 2016 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1849790914 AB The ‘war on terror’ has had an enormous impact on citizens’ legal rights and legal status. Using data from interviews with British Pakistani Kashmiri Muslims, this paper explores how the change to citizens’ legal rights and legal status in the ‘war on terror’, the legal dimension of citizenship, has impacted the psychological dimension of citizenship. Through denoting legal rights, equality and status the study revealed the powerful role of the state and the police in shaping citizens’ perceptions of the legal dimension of citizenship. The paper explores how changes to participants’ perceptions of their legal status and legal rights are instrumental in shaping the psychological dimension of citizenship - participants’ sense of loyalty, belonging and attachment to their British identity and their Islamic identity. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 124-125 K1 Conservative Party K1 Legal Status K1 Moral Panic K1 Psychological Dimension K1 Religious Identity DO 10.1007/s10612-015-9279-2