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Global Patterns of Terrorism Are Dominated by Extremism in Largely Muslim States. The first section of the report makes it clear that the patterns of extremist violence are dominated by violence in largely Muslim states and by extremist movements that claim to represent Islamic values.
- Iraq, Isis and The Syrian War
Burke Chair reports on the intertwined conflicts in Iraq and...
- Afghanistan
As security threats continue to evolve in Afghanistan, we...
- North Africa
The New State Department Report on Terrorism: Rethinking the...
- The Gulf
The Middle East Program leads CSIS’s analysis of key trends...
- Iraq, Isis and The Syrian War
Researchers have studied the condemnation of terrorism by European Muslim representatives, committees, and umbrella organizations, but also the everyday resistance to violent extremism in various Muslim communities.
Islamic terrorism (also known as Islamist terrorism or radical Islamic terrorism) refers to terrorist acts with religious motivations carried out by fundamentalist militant Islamists and Islamic extremists.
Most terrorism has nothing to do with Islam, yet thanks to 9/11 politicians and the media, that’s the way it is presented to the public.
In this first study, we investigated how ethnic majority non-Muslims (henceforth called non-Muslims) and ethnic minority Muslim (henceforth called Muslims) in the U.K. perceive a minority-group member at risk of becoming a terrorist and tested how these perceptions influence their policy support.
Two decades after the 11 September terrorist attacks in New York, terror networks Al-Qaida and Islamic State – also known as Da’esh – continue to pose a grave threat to peace and security,...
GENEVA (4 March 2021) – Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks and other horrific acts of terrorism purportedly carried out in the name of Islam, institutional suspicion of Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim has escalated to epidemic proportions, a UN expert told the Human Rights Council today.