Abstract

The implementation of the anti-terrorism plan in the prison administration allowed the study of clinical and criminological settings of radicalized 112 people placed in open and secure custody. Analysis of their clinical profile and criminological helped to highlight the high rate of common crime (75% of subjects) as well as four special criminological profiles: ambitious offenders, criminal network converts, people in precarious situations, severely mentally ill. Finally, we observe commonalties in terms of psychic functioning: a psychopathological axis (identity conflict, anger, hatred) and vulnerability factors (mothers with somatic diseases, absent fathers, large family, low educational level, delinquent contacts, criminal records). A change in the expression of their radicalization has also been observed and discussed in the light of professional postures involved.

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