Jihadology presents Academic Journal Articles of 2013, Part I

For previous posts in this series see:



Abdulmalik Mohammad Abdullah Eissa — Islamist political movements in Yemen
Ahmet Yükleyen and Aziz Abba — Religious Authorization of the Justice and Spirituality Movement in Morocco
Alessandro Orsini — A Day Among the Diehard Terrorists: The Psychological Costs of Doing Ethnographic Research
Andrew Zammit — Explaining a Turning Point in Australian Jihadism
Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen — Promoting Exit from Violent Extremism: Themes and Approaches
Anne Stenersen — ‘Bomb-Making for Beginners’: Inside al Al-Qaeda E-Learning Course
Anne Wolf — An Islamist ‘renaissance’? Religion & politics in post-revolutionary Tunisia
Arjun Chowdhury and Scott Fitzsimmons — Effective but inefficient: understanding the costs of counterterrorism
Assaf Moghadam — How Al Qaeda Innovates 
Audrey Kurth Cronin — The ‘War on Terrorism’: What Does it Mean to Win?
Benjamin Acosta and Steven J. Childs — Illuminating the Global Suicide-Attack Network
Benjamin S. Eveslage — Clarifying Boko Haram’s Transnational Intentions, Using Content Analysis of Public Statements in 2012
Benjamin W. Bahney, Radha K. Iyengar, Patrick B. Johnston, Danielle F. Jung, Jacob N. Shapiro, and Howard J. Shatz — Insurgent Compensation: Evidence from Iraq
Beverley Milton-Edwards — Islamist Versus Islamist: Rising Challenge in Gaza
Boaz Ganor and Ophir Falk — De-Radicalization in Israel’s Prison System  
Brian J. Bowe — The Heartbreak of the Place- Space, Religion and Politics in Post-9/11 Mosque Controversies
Bridget Rose Nolan — The Effects of Cleric Statements on Suicide Bombings in Pakistan, 2000–2010
C. Christine Fair — Insights from a Database of Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen Militants
Charlinda Santifort-Jordan and Todd Sandler — An Empirical Study of Suicide Terrorism: A Global Analysis
Chen Brama and Moshe Gammer — Radical Islamism, Traditional Islam and Ethno-Nationalism in the Northern Caucasus

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