An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019

This thesis is an institutionalist examination of the development of British CVE propaganda policy from 2006 to 2019. The central focus of examination is the Research Information and Communications Unit (RICU), established under Gordon Brown in 2007. However, it also investigates the development of...

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Main Author: Porter, David T.B.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63036/
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author Porter, David T.B.
author_facet Porter, David T.B.
author_sort Porter, David T.B.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis is an institutionalist examination of the development of British CVE propaganda policy from 2006 to 2019. The central focus of examination is the Research Information and Communications Unit (RICU), established under Gordon Brown in 2007. However, it also investigates the development of associated policy for censorship of extremist material. The driving aim of this analysis is to ascertain how the British state has adapted itself to the newly dominant modes of political and social communication, undergirded by technological advance in terms of hardware, software, platforms and ever-widening participation. Through careful institutionalist observation, the thesis seeks to disentangle this policy evolution to extract and separate intra-governmental and intra-organizational factors from the inescapable demands of a rapidly shifting information economy. Such an operation allows us to make contributions in two complimentary fields. First, it reveals the processes that guide policy evolution in British security matters. Secondly, such a separation allows us to identify the degree to which such changes have been technologically determined – either by facilitating gentle experimentation, or through reversing underlying policy assumptions. In simpler terms, we are not only interested in how the British state has reshaped itself to face the challenges of the internet, but how the internet itself has implacably bent the British state to its own force and logics. Doing so can illuminate many threads relevant to scholarly attention. We can appreciate more fully the process of how new technological realities are negotiated by the British state, the internal policy-making process, and by extension how this process has impacted the political culture of the United Kingdom.
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spelling nottingham-630362025-02-28T15:03:43Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63036/ An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019 Porter, David T.B. This thesis is an institutionalist examination of the development of British CVE propaganda policy from 2006 to 2019. The central focus of examination is the Research Information and Communications Unit (RICU), established under Gordon Brown in 2007. However, it also investigates the development of associated policy for censorship of extremist material. The driving aim of this analysis is to ascertain how the British state has adapted itself to the newly dominant modes of political and social communication, undergirded by technological advance in terms of hardware, software, platforms and ever-widening participation. Through careful institutionalist observation, the thesis seeks to disentangle this policy evolution to extract and separate intra-governmental and intra-organizational factors from the inescapable demands of a rapidly shifting information economy. Such an operation allows us to make contributions in two complimentary fields. First, it reveals the processes that guide policy evolution in British security matters. Secondly, such a separation allows us to identify the degree to which such changes have been technologically determined – either by facilitating gentle experimentation, or through reversing underlying policy assumptions. In simpler terms, we are not only interested in how the British state has reshaped itself to face the challenges of the internet, but how the internet itself has implacably bent the British state to its own force and logics. Doing so can illuminate many threads relevant to scholarly attention. We can appreciate more fully the process of how new technological realities are negotiated by the British state, the internal policy-making process, and by extension how this process has impacted the political culture of the United Kingdom. 2020-12-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63036/1/THESIS_CORRECTIONS_DavidPorter.pdf Porter, David T.B. (2020) An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. propaganda; counter-extremism; counter extremism; RICU; Research Information and Communications Unit; British; terrorism; internet; political communication; social media;
spellingShingle propaganda; counter-extremism; counter extremism; RICU; Research
Information and Communications Unit; British; terrorism; internet; political communication; social media;
Porter, David T.B.
An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title_full An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title_fullStr An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title_full_unstemmed An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title_short An institutional analysis of British CVE propaganda policy, 2006-2019
title_sort institutional analysis of british cve propaganda policy, 2006-2019
topic propaganda; counter-extremism; counter extremism; RICU; Research
Information and Communications Unit; British; terrorism; internet; political communication; social media;
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63036/