RT Research Data T1 Neurodivergence and violent extremism: aggregate data for 18 international case studies, 2023 A1 Salman, Nadine A2 Al-Attar, Zainab LA English PP Colchester PB UK Data Service YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1878405802 AB This research adopted a case study analysis approach, analysing a novel dataset of 18 closed-source international cases of individuals with extremism concerns who were diagnosed with, or undergoing diagnosis for, autism. This file provides a summary of the data relating to specific variables collected as part of this research. The variables presented here include additional metadata about the cases, primarily comprising categorical variables used to summarise the cases. The remaining data was obtained through qualitative case study summaries which were aggregated and summarised in the research paper. This qualitative data is not included in this document due to the sensitivity and potentially identifiable information provided in the case study summaries. This document contains two sheets: 1. Variables Collected This sheet summarises the variables collected, the type of data collected for each of these variables, and the categorical options for categorical variables that were coded at the point of data entry. 2. Data Summary This sheet presents a summary of the data collected across all the cases. Due to the sensitivity and personal information contained in the original dataset, the data are presented in tables which are aggregated across cases. This is to ensure that no single case is identifiable from the data. This is one of the projects managed under the Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats (CREST). This project aims to consolidate best practice in assessing the risk of extremism in individuals. Specifically, this project examines neurodivergence in the context of extremism vulnerability, risk, resilience, and opportunities for risk management. K1 Radikalismus K1 Radikalisierung K1 Gewalt K1 Fundamentalismus K1 Religion K1 Terrorismus K1 Political extremism K1 religious extremism K1 Radicalization K1 Terrorism K1 autism spectrum disorders K1 Forschungsdaten DO 10.5255/UKDA-SN-856832