Full Description

Buku Teks SO
Call Number
Title Neojihadism : toward a new understanding of terrorism and extmism / Pete Lentini
Author Lentini, Pete, author
Joint Author
Publisher Cheltenham, U.K. : Edward Elgar, 2013
Subject Terrorism--Religious aspects--Islam
Jihad--Political aspects
Location Perpustakaan UI, Lantai 2
Concise Text
 
  •  Availability
  •  Digital Files: 0
  •  Review
  •  Cover
  •  Abstract
Call Number Barcode Number Availability
[363.325 LEN n ;363.325 LEN n (1), 363.325 LEN n (1)] 01-15-06032 TERSEDIA
[363.325 LEN n ;363.325 LEN n (1), 363.325 LEN n (1)] 01-15-06023 TERSEDIA
No review available for this collection: 20396540
 Abstract
This book proposes that neojihadism is a new form of political organization, global subculture, counterculture and theological understanding, with an approach to political violence that is unique to the post-Cold War period. Author from Monash University, Australia. Many years after 9/?11 there are still not adequate means to categorize groups like Al Qaeda, home-grown cells and others that claim to be perpetrating and justifying terrorist acts under the banner of jihad. This book proposes that 'neojihadism' is a new form of political organization, global subculture, counterculture and theological understanding, with an approach to political violence that is unique to the post-Cold War period. What these groups espouse and enact differs radically from totalitarianism, cults, jihad - and even jihadism. Pete Lentini takes an interdisciplinary approach that fuses comparative politics, comparative theology, subcultural studies, Islamic studies, and the sociology of religion. It cites examples from global (Al Qaeda), regional (Jemaah Islamiyah) and nationally based (Chechen and Australian) groups to illustrate the diversity within the movement. Additionally, it draws from primary materials - some of which is translated from Arabic - to help to test the extent to which the term neojihadism is a significant political, theological, and military departure from previous Islamist group experiences. This fascinating book will be invaluable for academics including postgraduate and Masters' students of terrorism studies, political science, international relations, comparative religion, and Islamic studies. Contents Machine generated contents note: 1.Introduction 2.On The Movement 3.On jihadism 4.On The Movement's global dimensions: bin Laden as a political and spiritual commentator 5.On The Movement's local dimensions: the politics and theology of a Melbourne cell leader 6.On attempting to name the enemy: Islamo-fascism and Islamo-totalitarianism(s) 7.On fascism and totalitarianism 8.Conclusion: on neojihadism - a new understanding of terrorism and extremism?.