Cook, David2013-03-132013-03-132010-10Cook, David. "Rehabilitiation of Radicals." (2010) James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy: <a href="https://hdl.handle.net/1911/70540">https://hdl.handle.net/1911/70540</a>.https://hdl.handle.net/1911/70540In the past 10 years, the rehabilitation of Muslim radicals has become a pressing issue. Great numbers of radicals have passed in and out of various incarcerating institutions and are returned to their societies where they frequently rejoin radical groups, sometimes more radicalized and technically proficient than they were prior to their incarceration. Both Muslim and non-Muslim governments have sought different methods to rehabilitate radicals, ranging from arranging debates between radicals and mainstream Muslim religious elite to confronting them with betrayals and denunciations by relatives, friends, and associates. There are also full-scale モreeducationヤ camps. This policy paper will seek to evaluate these methodologies and propose for the United States a workable policy for re-integrating radicals into society, thus defusing the power of recidivismengRehabilitiation of RadicalsWhite paper