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Militant ideology atlas : research compendium / editor & project director: William McCants; project coordinator: Jarret Brachman; CTC director: Joseph Felter.

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Format:
Book
Government document
Contributor:
McCants, William F. (William Faizi), 1975- editor.
Brachman, Jarret
Felter, Joseph H.
Combating Terrorism Center (U.S.), issuing body.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Jihad--Philosophy--Bibliography.
Jihad.
Jihad in literature.
Muslim authors--Political and social views.
Muslim authors.
Religious militants.
Islamic fundamentalism.
Genre:
bibliographies.
Bibliographies.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (361 pages) : color illustrations
Place of Publication:
West Point, NY : Combating Terrorism Center, 2006.
Summary:
" ... An in-depth study of the Jihadi Movement's top thinkers and their most popular writings. This is the first systematic mapping of the ideology inspiring al-Qaeda. The CTC's researchers spent one year mining the most popular books and articles in al-Qaeda's online library, profiling hundreds of figures in the Jihadi Movement, and cataloging over 11,000 citations. The empirically supported findings of the project are surprising: The most influential Jihadi intellectuals are clerics from Jordan and Saudi Arabia, two of the US's closest allies in the Middle East. Among them, the Jordanian cleric Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi has had the most impact on other Jihadi thinkers and has been the most consequential in shaping the worldview of the Jihadi Movement. In contrast, the study finds that Usama Bin Ladin and Ayman al-Zawahiri have had little influence on other Jihadi theorists and strategists. The Research Compendium contains summaries of all the texts used in the study as well as biographies of the texts' authors and the figures they cite most."--CTC web site.
Notes:
"November 2006."
Includes bibliographical references (pages 24-31).
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed 29 Nov. 2006).
Other Format:
Print version: Militant ideology atlas.
OCLC:
76821484

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