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ISLAMIC MILITANT (11) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   114362


Af-Pak border stalemate / Shome, Ipsita   Journal Article
Shome, Ipsita Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   065602


Decline of revolutionary islam in Algeria and Egypt / Gerges, Fawaz A   Article
Gerges, Fawaz A Article
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Publication 1999.
Key Words Algeria  Egypt  Islamic Terrorism  Islamic Militant 
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3
ID:   056721


Do muslims engage in more domestic conflict than other religiou / Fox, Jonathan Spring 2003  Journal Article
Fox, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2003.
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4
ID:   127350


Echoes form the empty Niche Bamiyan Buddha speaks back / Haldar, Ankita   Journal Article
Haldar, Ankita Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Key Words Afghanistan  Buddhism  Women  Islamic Militant  National Culture  Hazara 
Taliban Iconoclasm  Bamiyan Buddha 
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5
ID:   023348


Hamas and the transformation(s) of political islam in palestine / Roy Sara Jan 2003  Article
Roy Sara Article
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Publication Jan 2003.
Description 13-20
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6
ID:   080112


Hezbollah: a proletarian party with an Islamic Manifesto - a sociopolitical analysis of Islamist populism in Lebanon and the Middle East / Salamey, Imad; Pearson, Frederic   Journal Article
Salamey, Imad Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the rising contention between a global foreign policy promoting liberal democracy in the Middle East and Islamist rejectionism. It provides a sociopolitical analysis of the phenomena of radical Islamist politics while focusing on the experience of Hezbollah in Lebanon. It associates the growth of Hezbollah, a political movement seen in various forms in several countries, with social class dynamics that have been antagonised by social inequality, opportunistic leadership, the importation of Western-ordered democracy and by perceived foreign intervention. By examining the root dynamic of Hezbollah in Lebanon, this article argues that poverty has provided the fertile ground for the growth of Islamic populism as a revolutionary movement and has represented a major reason for the rejection of democratisation and political reform. A global foreign policy that seeks to uproot extremism in favour of state-building and the advancement of democracy in the Middle East needs to be reoriented so as to help undermine class inequality and to strengthen government-sponsored public services programmes for the underclass
Key Words Middle East  Lebanon  Islamic Terrorism  Islamic Militant  Hezbollah 
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7
ID:   130156


Indian army-big steps in plugging the gaps along the China and / Ahmedullah, Mohammed   Journal Article
Ahmedullah, Mohammed Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
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8
ID:   058308


Madarsa in Pakistan: the chief promoter of islamic militancy an / Mehrotra, O N Feb 2000  Journal Article
Mehrotra, O N Journal Article
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Publication Feb 2000.
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9
ID:   068471


Militant islam and internal conflict in South Asia and beyond / Kapur, Ashok   Article
Kapur, Ashok Article
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Publication 1999.
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10
ID:   078248


Militant Islam and the futile fight for reputation / Shannon, Vaughn P; Dennis, Michael   Journal Article
Shannon, Vaughn P Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract The reputation debate in international relations has split into two camps: those suggesting actions affect perceptions of resolve and those who say they do not. This article engages the reputation debate in the context of militant Islamists. Using political psychology, we offer a theory of biased attributions that challenges Mercer's "desires" hypothesis that reputations for irresolution do not form when an act is desirable from the perceiver's eye. Motivated biases undercut any reputation for resolve in cases of firmness and challenge rationalist claims of reputation formation. Militant Islamist perceptions of U.S. and Soviet interventions in the Muslim world since the 1980s support this thesis and caution against futile wars for reputation
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11
ID:   079615


Rise of Pakistani Taliban and the response of the state / Behuria, Ashok K   Journal Article
Behuria, Ashok K Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract The rise of a militant Islamist group calling itself Pakistani Taliban has drawn wider international attention in recent years. It has appeared as a serious internal security threat for the Pakistani state and as an external challenge for the Afghan government facing a resurgent Taliban in southern Afghanistan. This article seeks to trace the evolution of 'Pakistani Taliban' and to isolate and analyse its ideological moorings and its political aspirations. It also seeks to critically examine the strategy employed by the Pakistani state to deal with such local militancy and study the impact such a group will have on Pakistani society and polity
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