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The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States
Criminology & Public Policy, Volume: 20, Issue: 1, Pages: 177 - 203
Swansea University Author: Joe Whittaker
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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/1745-9133.12537
Abstract
This study offers an empirical insight into terrorists’ use of the Internet. Although criminology has previously been quiet on this topic, behavior-based studies can aid in understanding the interactions between terrorists and their environments. Using a database of 231 US-based Islamic State terror...
Published in: | Criminology & Public Policy |
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ISSN: | 1538-6473 1745-9133 |
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Wiley
2021
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa55896 |
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2021-11-18T10:31:13.5090493 v2 55896 2020-12-15 The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States 112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab 0000-0001-7342-6369 Joe Whittaker Joe Whittaker true false 2020-12-15 CSSP This study offers an empirical insight into terrorists’ use of the Internet. Although criminology has previously been quiet on this topic, behavior-based studies can aid in understanding the interactions between terrorists and their environments. Using a database of 231 US-based Islamic State terrorists, four important findings are offered: 1) This cohort utilized the Internet heavily for the purposes of both networking with co-ideologues and learning about their intended activity. 2) There is little reason to believe that these online interactions are replacing offline ones, as has previously been suggested. Rather, terrorists tend to operate in both domains. 3) Online activity seems to be similar across the sample, regardless of the number of co-offenders or the sophistication of attack. 4) There is reason to believe that using the Internet may be an impediment to terrorists’ success. Journal Article Criminology & Public Policy 20 1 177 203 Wiley 1538-6473 1745-9133 Radicalization; Terrorism; Online Radicalization; Extremism 1 2 2021 2021-02-01 10.1111/1745-9133.12537 COLLEGE NANME Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy COLLEGE CODE CSSP Swansea University 2021-11-18T10:31:13.5090493 2020-12-15T17:09:16.7446542 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Social Sciences - Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy Joe Whittaker 0000-0001-7342-6369 1 55896__19136__ece57c197f714af18a2b34b512c653c3.pdf 55896.pdf 2021-01-20T15:27:43.8380837 Output 384142 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2023-01-03T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
spellingShingle |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States Joe Whittaker |
title_short |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
title_full |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
title_fullStr |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
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The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
title_sort |
The online behaviors of Islamic state terrorists in the United States |
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112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab |
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112ed59957393e783f913443ec80faab_***_Joe Whittaker |
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Joe Whittaker |
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Criminology & Public Policy |
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This study offers an empirical insight into terrorists’ use of the Internet. Although criminology has previously been quiet on this topic, behavior-based studies can aid in understanding the interactions between terrorists and their environments. Using a database of 231 US-based Islamic State terrorists, four important findings are offered: 1) This cohort utilized the Internet heavily for the purposes of both networking with co-ideologues and learning about their intended activity. 2) There is little reason to believe that these online interactions are replacing offline ones, as has previously been suggested. Rather, terrorists tend to operate in both domains. 3) Online activity seems to be similar across the sample, regardless of the number of co-offenders or the sophistication of attack. 4) There is reason to believe that using the Internet may be an impediment to terrorists’ success. |
published_date |
2021-02-01T04:10:26Z |
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11.037056 |