RT Article T1 What Drives Counter-Extremism? The Extent of P/CVE Policies in the West and Their Structural Correlates JF Terrorism and political violence VO 35 IS 8 SP 1724 OP 1752 A1 Shanaah, Sadi A2 Heath-Kelly, Charlotte LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1870086015 AB Counter-extremism (P/CVE) policies have shot to global prominence rapidly, yet there are large discrepancies in their implementation both between, and inside, countries. In this paper, we construct and present a robust index of P/CVE policies in Western countries (N = 38), based on data submitted by national experts, which we then use to test three hypothesized structural correlates of the extent of P/CVE implementation: threat of terrorism (measured as the number of past attacks/victims), size of Muslim minorities (Muslim communities have been “securitised” as potential threats in the post 9/11 period), and neoliberal governance (drawing on criminological literature that connects neoliberalism to anticipatory crime control). We find the first two structural factors to be positively and significantly correlated to the intensity of P/CVE deployment, while neoliberal governance negatively and significantly. In the discussion, we highlight the usefulness of a complementary in-depth qualitative research inspired by these findings. K1 Neoliberalism K1 Muslims K1 Terrorism K1 Index K1 Counter-extremism DO 10.1080/09546553.2022.2080063