Black markets and militants : informal networks in the Middle East and Africa / Khalid Mustafa Medani, McGill University, Montréal.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781108961011
- BP 190.5 T47
- POL040000 | POL040000
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Carlos P. Romulo Library | BP 190.5 T47 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
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BP 182 S64 2003 Onward Muslim soldiers : how jihad still threatens America and the West / | BP 189 N5 1994 Studies in Islamic mysticism / | BP 190.5 S3 1991 Muslims & science : religious orthodox and the struggle for rationality / | BP 190.5 T47 Black markets and militants : informal networks in the Middle East and Africa / | BP 190.5 T47 T34 2010 -2015 Fatwa on terrorism and suicide bombings / | BP 195 A5 A4 2014 World crisis and the pathway to peace : a compilation of specific and letters of Hadrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad / | BP 1905 P34 2015 Islamic curriculum on peace and counter-terrorism / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"The emergence, and proliferation, of Islamist militant organizations, ranging from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and Al-Shabbaab in Somalia, to Boko Haram in Nigeria and other parts of West Africa, has once again demonstrated that political Islam is an important global political issue. It has also highlighted a number of challenging, but increasingly crucial analytical questions: How popular a force is militant Islam, and how is it distinguishable from more conservative and moderate forms of Islamic activism? Does the rise of Islamic militancy across many regions of the Muslim world represent a "clash of civilizations," or is its emergence a result of locally embedded, but globally linked, economic and social forces? And, finally, given the considerable diversity of socioeconomic formations within Muslim societies when, and under what conditions, do religious rather than ethnic cleavages serve as the most salient source of political identification?"-- Provided by publisher.
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