RT Article T1 A Relative Deprivation-Based Theory of Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism: Policy Implications for Program Design and Deradicalization Work JF Crime & delinquency VO 71 IS 3 SP 964 OP 992 A1 Köhler, Daniel 1985- LA English YR 2025 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1917322631 AB The theory of Relative Deprivation (RD)—introduced by Walter Runciman in the late 1960s—is one of the most widely established theoretical concepts explaining political violence. Criminology has mostly abandoned RD theory despite many valuable contributions it could still make to the field. This theoretical article applies the RD theory in Ted Gurr’s version to the field of preventing and countering violent extremism (P/CVE) practice and policy through a combination of meta-narrative and integrative literature reviews. By studying P/CVE through the lens of RD, this article demonstrates the continuous value of RD theory as a link between criminology and terrorism research on the one hand and advances evidence-based concepts in the P/CVE field on the other. K1 Desistance K1 preventing and countering violent extremism K1 Deradicalization K1 relative deprivation theory DO 10.1177/00111287241264244