Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being

Fear is often described as an intense human emotion in response to a perceived threat or impending doom. In today’s globalised world where climate change, financial crises and international crime form a new agenda of fear, insecurity and fear have become pervasive forces in the everyday lives of ind...

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Main Author: Aly, Anne
Other Authors: David Webb
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Springer 2012
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2278-1_3#page-1
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12821
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author Aly, Anne
author2 David Webb
author_facet David Webb
Aly, Anne
author_sort Aly, Anne
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Fear is often described as an intense human emotion in response to a perceived threat or impending doom. In today’s globalised world where climate change, financial crises and international crime form a new agenda of fear, insecurity and fear have become pervasive forces in the everyday lives of individuals and communities. The terrorist attacks on the United States in 2001 ushered in an era of new fears about international terrorism and new debates about security, civil rights and insecurity. Insecurity became transformed from a situational emotional response to a perpetual state of alertness, and terrorism is imagined as an unknown, but impending, doom: where the everyday has become subliminally associated with the threat of terrorism and the increased security presence invokes the spectre of security and amplifies threat in the public imagination. This chapter will explore the fear of terrorism and its impact on community and individual well-being. It is based on a research project on responses to media discourses on fear among Australian Muslim communities and the broader Australian community. The research incorporated Australia’s first Metric of Fear that measured both community and individual perceptions of safety and security in response to the threat of terrorism. The findings reported here indicate that the fear of terrorism extends beyond an individual fear vis a vis being physically harmed in a terrorist attack. The fear of terrorism is also a community fear associated with perceived threat to civil liberties and democratic freedom. For Australian Muslim communities, the fear of terrorism is very much associated with community identity and their status as a community to be feared.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-128212023-02-02T07:57:37Z Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being Aly, Anne David Webb Eduardo Wills-Herrera Fear is often described as an intense human emotion in response to a perceived threat or impending doom. In today’s globalised world where climate change, financial crises and international crime form a new agenda of fear, insecurity and fear have become pervasive forces in the everyday lives of individuals and communities. The terrorist attacks on the United States in 2001 ushered in an era of new fears about international terrorism and new debates about security, civil rights and insecurity. Insecurity became transformed from a situational emotional response to a perpetual state of alertness, and terrorism is imagined as an unknown, but impending, doom: where the everyday has become subliminally associated with the threat of terrorism and the increased security presence invokes the spectre of security and amplifies threat in the public imagination. This chapter will explore the fear of terrorism and its impact on community and individual well-being. It is based on a research project on responses to media discourses on fear among Australian Muslim communities and the broader Australian community. The research incorporated Australia’s first Metric of Fear that measured both community and individual perceptions of safety and security in response to the threat of terrorism. The findings reported here indicate that the fear of terrorism extends beyond an individual fear vis a vis being physically harmed in a terrorist attack. The fear of terrorism is also a community fear associated with perceived threat to civil liberties and democratic freedom. For Australian Muslim communities, the fear of terrorism is very much associated with community identity and their status as a community to be feared. 2012 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12821 http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2278-1_3#page-1 Springer restricted
spellingShingle Aly, Anne
Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title_full Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title_fullStr Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title_full_unstemmed Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title_short Terror, Fear and Individual and Community Well-Being
title_sort terror, fear and individual and community well-being
url http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-94-007-2278-1_3#page-1
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12821