Breadcrumb Home Volume X, Issue 6, 2016 Volume X, Issue 6, 2016 Previous Previous Next Volume X, Issue 6, 2016 Download complete issue PDF Next Table of contents Articles 14 VOL. X:6, 2016 Jihadi Terrorism in Europe: The IS-Effect Petter Nesser, Jihadi Terrorism in Europe: The IS-Effect, Emilie Oftedal VOL. X:6, 2016 Criminal Pasts, Terrorist Futures: European Jihadists and the New Crime-Terror Nexus Rajan Basra, Peter R. Neumann VOL. X:6, 2016 Plebeian Jihadism in Denmark: An Individualisation and Popularization Predating the Growth of the Islamic State Ann-Sophie Hemmingsen VOL. X:6, 2016 Patterns of Involvement among Individuals Arrested for Islamic State-related Terrorist Activities in Spain, 2013-2016 Fernando Reinares VOL. X:6, 2016 Jihadism in Norway: a Typology of Militant Networks in a Peripheral European Country Brynjar Lia VOL. X:6, 2016 With a Little Help from my Friends: an Exploration of the Tactical Use of Single-Actor Terrorism by the Islamic State Clare Ellis VOL. X:6, 2016 IS and the Jihadist Information Highway – Projecting Influence and Religious Identity via Telegram Nico Prucha VOL. X:6, 2016 “I Just Said It. The State”: Examining the Motivations for Danish Foreign Fighting in Syria Jakob Sheikh VOL. X:6, 2016 Foreign Fighters in Syria and Iraq and the Socio-Economic Environment They Faced at Home: A Comparison of European Countries Philip Verwimp VOL. X:6, 2016 Terrorism and Beyond: Exploring the Fallout of the European Foreign Fighter Phenomenon in Syria and Iraq Jeanine de Roy van Zuijdewijn VOL. X:6, 2016 The French "Iraqi Networks" of the 2000s: Matrix of the 2015 Terrorist Attacks? Jean Pierre Filiu VOL. X:6, 2016 Countering Violent Extremism with Governance Networks Anja Dalgaard Nielsen VOL. X:6, 2016 Why States Fail to Counter Foreign Fighter Mobilizations: The Role of Intelligence Services Timothy Holman VOL. X:6, 2016 The Future of Jihadism in Europe: A Pessimistic View Thomas Hegghammer Research Notes 0 Resources 2
VOL. X:6, 2016 Jihadi Terrorism in Europe: The IS-Effect Petter Nesser, Jihadi Terrorism in Europe: The IS-Effect, Emilie Oftedal
VOL. X:6, 2016 Criminal Pasts, Terrorist Futures: European Jihadists and the New Crime-Terror Nexus Rajan Basra, Peter R. Neumann
VOL. X:6, 2016 Plebeian Jihadism in Denmark: An Individualisation and Popularization Predating the Growth of the Islamic State Ann-Sophie Hemmingsen
VOL. X:6, 2016 Patterns of Involvement among Individuals Arrested for Islamic State-related Terrorist Activities in Spain, 2013-2016 Fernando Reinares
VOL. X:6, 2016 Jihadism in Norway: a Typology of Militant Networks in a Peripheral European Country Brynjar Lia
VOL. X:6, 2016 With a Little Help from my Friends: an Exploration of the Tactical Use of Single-Actor Terrorism by the Islamic State Clare Ellis
VOL. X:6, 2016 IS and the Jihadist Information Highway – Projecting Influence and Religious Identity via Telegram Nico Prucha
VOL. X:6, 2016 “I Just Said It. The State”: Examining the Motivations for Danish Foreign Fighting in Syria Jakob Sheikh
VOL. X:6, 2016 Foreign Fighters in Syria and Iraq and the Socio-Economic Environment They Faced at Home: A Comparison of European Countries Philip Verwimp
VOL. X:6, 2016 Terrorism and Beyond: Exploring the Fallout of the European Foreign Fighter Phenomenon in Syria and Iraq Jeanine de Roy van Zuijdewijn
VOL. X:6, 2016 The French "Iraqi Networks" of the 2000s: Matrix of the 2015 Terrorist Attacks? Jean Pierre Filiu
VOL. X:6, 2016 Why States Fail to Counter Foreign Fighter Mobilizations: The Role of Intelligence Services Timothy Holman