Jihadology presents Academic Journal Articles of 2013, Part VI

For previous posts in this series see:



Simon Wolfgang Fuchs — Do Excellent Surgeons Make Miserable Exegetes? Negotiating the Sunni Tradition in the ǧihādī Camps
Sipco Vellenga and Gerard Wiegers — Polarization or bridging? Responses of Muslim and non-Muslim organizations to criticism of Islam in the Netherlands
Steven Gertz — Permission to Stay in “Enemy” Territory? Hanbali juristic thinking on whether Muslims must emigrate from non-Muslim lands
Sumita Pahwa — Secularizing Islamism and Islamizing Democracy: The Political and Ideational Evolution of the Egyptian Muslim Brothers 1984–2012
Susanne Martin — Dilemmas of “going legit”: why should violent groups engage in or avoid electoral politics?
Sybille Reinke de Buitrago — Media Discourse on Jihadist Terrorism in Europe
Talmiz Ahmad — The Arab Spring and its Implications for India
Tarik K. Firro — The Political Context of Early Wahhabi Discourse of Takfir
Tawfiq Alsaif — Relationship between state and religion in Saudi Arabia: the role of Wahabism in governance
Teije Hidde Donker — Re-emerging Islamism in Tunisia: Repositioning Religion in Politics and Society
Teun van Dongen — The lenghts terrorists go to- perpetrator characteristics and the complexity of jihadist terrorist attacks in Europe, 2004–2011
Thomas H. Johnson — Taliban adaptations and innovations
 Thomas Hegghammer — ʿAbdallāh ʿAzzām and Palestine
Thomas Hegghammer — Should I Stay or Should I Go? Explaining Variation in Western Jihadists’ Choice between Domestic and Foreign Fighting
Thomas Hegghammer — The recruiter’s dilemma Signalling and rebel recruitment tactics
Thomas Hegghammer and Joas Wagemakers — The Palestine Effect
Uriya Shavita — Can Muslims Befriend Non-Muslims? Debating al-walāʾ wa-al-barāʾ (Loyalty and Disavowal) in Theory and Practice
Virginie Andre & Shandon Harris-Hogan — Mohamed Merah: From Petty Criminal to Neojihadist
Yahya M. Michot — An Important Reader of al-Ghazali- Ibn Taymiyya