From Inspire to Rumiyah: does instructional content in online jihadist magazines lead to attacks?
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Date
Authors
Zekulin, Michael
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Considerable time has been spent examining how groups like AQAP
and ISIS used their online magazines to reach and radicalize
individuals in Western democratic states. This paper continues this
investigation but shifts its analysis to focus on the ‘how-to’ or
instructional content of these publications, an understudied part
of the literature. One of the stated goals of these magazines was
to provide tactical know-how and assist supporters conducting
terror plots in their home states. The question: did the tactics
outlined in the magazines materialize in actual plots/attacks and
how quickly were they put into practice? The paper examines this
question by creating an overview of the tactics which appear in
these publications and cross referencing them with a dataset of
166 Islamist-inspired homegrown terror plots/attacks in 14
Western democratic states to determine if, and when, they first
appeared in relation to their publication date. It concluded that
while some of the suggested strategies did appear following their
publication, often it occurred after considerable time had elapsed.
This suggests the instructional content did not resonate with
readers in real time.
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Source
Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression
Type
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Restricted until
2099-12-31