Articles of the Week – 10/30-11/5

Sunday October 31:

The Taliban Haven’t Changed, But U.S. Policy Must – Haroro J. Ingram, Andrew Mines, and Omar Mohammed, Lawfare: https://bit.ly/3whsZEa

10 Years On: New Contextual Factors in the Study of Islamism – Lucia Ardovini and Erika Biagini, Middle East Critique: https://bit.ly/3GTRTPe

Refugees, Perceived Threat & Domestic Terrorism – Graig R. Klein, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism: https://bit.ly/3wjfh3A

Monday November 1:

Does International Terrorism Affect Public Attitudes toward Refugees? Evidence from a Large-Scale Natural Experiment – Charles Breton and Gregory Eady, The Journal of Politics: https://bit.ly/3wfZenm

“The Arc of Jihad”: The Ecosystem of Militancy in East, Central and Southern Africa – Brenda Mugeci Githing’u and  Tore Refslund Hamming, ICSR: https://bit.ly/3GT7kHy

The Propaganda of Jihadist Groups in the Era of Covid-19 – Daniele Garofalo, Jihadica: https://bit.ly/3mMHQ6B

From Iranian Shi’ization to colonization in Syria to establish Shiʿi territorial contiguity – Ronen A. Cohen, Middle Eastern Studies: https://bit.ly/3kbdB7z

Tuesday November 2:

The Battlefield of the Media: Reporting Terrorism in Conditions of Conflict and Political Repression – Andrew Glazzard and Alastair Reed, ICCT: https://bit.ly/3CNzGAk

Jihadi Networks Are More Resilient Than We Think – Daniel Byman, Foreign Policy: https://bit.ly/3EOs7u0

Wednesday November 3:

The Fractious Future of the Islamic State in West Africa – Stig Jarle Hansen, War on the Rocks: https://bit.ly/3o3rANM

Provocation and Attrition Strategies in Transnational Terrorism: The Case of Al-Shabaab – Mohammed Ibrahim Shire, Terrorism and Political Violence: https://bit.ly/3qauO4Y

Thursday November 4:

With Haqqanis at the Helm, the Taliban Will Grow Even More Extreme – Abdul Sayed and Colin P. Clarke, Foreign Policy: https://bit.ly/3F3iDv5