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Book ChapterDOI

The French Path to Jihad

John Rosenthal
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
- Iss: 139, pp 183-193
TLDR
The authors analyzed a published collection of interviews of suspected members of al-Qaeda and fellow travelers in French prisons by social scientist Fared Khosrokhavar and found that the inmates interviewed were highly educated, well-traveled, and multilingual.
Abstract
Several French nationals or residents have fought with the Taliban in Afghanistan and the insurgency in Iraq Zacarias Moussaoui, the most famous French jihadist, is now serving a life sentence in an American prison for his connection to 9/11 In the following selection, John Rosenthal, who writes on European politics, analyzes a published collection of interviews of suspected members of al Qaeda and fellow travelers in French prisons by social scientist Fared Khosrokhavar Almost all these inmates were either born in France or were long-term residents of France who came originally from the Mahghreb, the North African area that had once been under French control French was either their native language or they spoke it fluently One theory challenged by Khosrokhavar is that jihadists are poor and uneducated As the research shows, “jihadists are largely recruited from relatively more privileged social strata in their countries of origin As a rule, the inmates interviewed are highly educated, well-traveled, and multilingual”

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Citations
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Identity and Islamic Radicalization in Western Europe

TL;DR: The authors argue that socio-economic disadvantage and political factors, such as the West's foreign policy with regard to the Muslim world, along with historical grievances, play a part in the development of Islamic radicalized collective action in Western Europe.
Dissertation

Islamist radicalisation in Italy : myth or nightmare? : an empirical analysis of the Italian case study

TL;DR: This paper conducted a large-scale quantitative and qualitative analysis of Italian Muslims' views on religiously framed violence and determined the presence of an "Islamist outlook" through data from hundreds of questionnaires and interviews/focus groups.

Lone Wolf Terrorism and the Influence of the Internet in France

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that increasing use of the Internet by terrorists makes it more difficult to determine whether or not individuals are truly lone wolves, and they apply this hypothesis to the complicated French case study of Mohamed Merah, whose lone wolf status is still disputed even a year after his attacks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facing Tomorrow's Global Challenges What Role for Social Science?

TL;DR: For example, this paper pointed out that social scientists are not good at predicting macro-level changes and world events, such as the collapse of state socialism in the Soviet Union and the disintegration of the second world order.