Assistant Professor
Institution
American University
Research Area Keywords
Radicalisation; Terrorism; Extremism; Propaganda; Counter-radicalisation.
Contact: braddock@american.edu
Dr Kurt Braddock
About Kurt
Kurt Braddock is an Assistant Professor of Public Communication in the School of Communication at American University. Kurt also holds faculty fellow positions at the SOC's Center for Media and Social Impact (CMSI) and the IDEAS Lab. His research focuses on the persuasive strategies used by violent extremist groups to recruit and radicalize audiences targeted by their propaganda. Kurt also explores how theories of communication, persuasion, and social influence can be used to inform practices meant to prevent radicalization among vulnerable audiences. His first book, titled Weaponized Words: The Strategic Role of Persuasion in Violent Radicalization and Counter-Radicalization (Cambridge University Press, 2020), provides examples of how terrorist groups persuade audiences to adopt their ideologies, and how this process can be fought. Kurt is presently interested in the development of communicative counter-radicalization strategies that prevent white supremacism, neo-Nazism, and the adoption of other violent far-right ideologies.
In addition to publishing his work in key communication and security journals (e.g., Communication Monographs, Terrorism and Political Violence, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism), Kurt also provides input to key institutions in D.C. to inform how they fight terrorism. Some of these institutions include the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and the U.S. Department of Defense. His work has also been used at the international level, where Kurt has advised the U.K. Home Office, Public Safety Canada, the United Nations Counterterrorism Executive Directorate, and others.
Key Publications
Journal articles
Countering reactionary co-radicalization (RC-R): using multi-representational ads (2023)
Shabbir, H. Baines, P. Dean, D., & Braddock, K.
Stand down: A Journal of Applied Communication Research forum on extremism and White nationalism in the United States Military (2022)
McDermott, V., May, A., Hernandez, L. H., Erdemandi, M., Mararac, N., Bean, H., Howe, W. T., Braddock, K., Munz, S., Yamaguchi, P., & DiCamillo, A.
The moderating effects of "dark" personality traits and message vividness on the persuasiveness of terrorist narrative propaganda (2022)
Braddock, K., Schumann, S., Corner, E., & Gill, P.
Engagement in subversive online activity predicts susceptibility to persuasion by far-right extremist propaganda (2022)
Braddock, K., Hughes, B., Goldberg, B., Miller-Idriss, C.
Vaccinating against hate: Using attitudinal inoculation to confer resistance to persuasion by extremist propaganda (2022)
Braddock, K.
Testing the efficacy of attitudinal inoculation videos to enhance COVID-19 vaccine acceptance: A quasi-experimental intervention trial (2022)
Piltch-Loeb, R., Su, M., Hughes, B., Testa, M., Goldberg, B., Braddock, K., Miller-Idriss, C., Maturo, V., & Savoia, E.
Cultivating trust and source credibility in online counter-narratives intended to reduce support for terrorism (2020)
Braddock, K., & Morrison, J. (2020).
Book Chapters
Cognition, emotion, communication, and violent radicalisation (2023)
Braddock, K. in The Routledge Handbook on Radicalisation and Countering Radicalisation, Busher, J., Malkki, L. & Marsden S. (eds.)
Grants and Projects
Department of Homeland Security (2020-2023) - Far-Right Disinformation and Radicalization Processes