Religion
Permanent URI for this community
Browse
Browsing Religion by Author "Cook, David"
Now showing 1 - 20 of 23
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item An Early Muslim Daniel Apocalypse(Brill, 2002-01) Cook, DavidItem Apocalypse and Identity: Ibn Al-Munadi and Tenth Century Baghdad(McGill University, 2011) Cook, DavidItem Apostasy from Islam: A Historical Perspective(The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 2006) Cook, DavidItem Boko Haram: A Prognosis(2011) Cook, David; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Hadith, Authority and the End of the World: Traditions in Modern Muslim Apocalyptic Literature(Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino, 2002) Cook, DavidItem Islamism and Jihadism: The Transformation of Classical Notions of Jihad into an Ideology of Terrorism(Routledge, 2009-06) Cook, DavidContemporary jihad is the lineal descendant of classical jihad theory as modified by contemporary radical Islam. It has expressions in both Sunni and Shi‘ite Islam, but differs from the classical material in that the targets allowable for jihad are not states but smaller groups or even individuals. The article traces the history of this development.Item Messianism in the Mid-11th/17th Century as Exemplified by Al-Barzanji (1040-1103/1630-1691)(The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 2007) Cook, DavidItem The recovery of radical Islam in the wake of the defeat of the Taliban(Routledge, 2003) Cook, DavidThis article analyses the intellectual and religious processes through which radical Islam has had to confront its defeat in Afghanistan and rebuild during the period since that time, including paradigms of battle, dreams and martyrologies and apocalyptic readings of history and current events.Item Rehabilitiation of Radicals(2010-10) Cook, David; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyIn the past 10 years, the rehabilitation of Muslim radicals has become a pressing issue. Great numbers of radicals have passed in and out of various incarcerating institutions and are returned to their societies where they frequently rejoin radical groups, sometimes more radicalized and technically proficient than they were prior to their incarceration. Both Muslim and non-Muslim governments have sought different methods to rehabilitate radicals, ranging from arranging debates between radicals and mainstream Muslim religious elite to confronting them with betrayals and denunciations by relatives, friends, and associates. There are also full-scale モreeducationヤ camps. This policy paper will seek to evaluate these methodologies and propose for the United States a workable policy for re-integrating radicals into society, thus defusing the power of recidivismItem Review of Ahmed Rashid's Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia(Oxford University Press, 2003) Cook, DavidItem Review of Anat Berko's The Past to Paradise: The Inner World of Suicide Bombers and their Dispatchers(Routledge, 2008-12) Cook, DavidItem Review of Geoffrey Regan's First Crusader: Byzantium's Holy Wars(Cambridge University Press, 2004-11) Cook, DavidItem Review of Mercedes Garcia-Arenal's Messianism and Puritanical Reform: Mahdis of the Muslim West(Cambridge University Press, 2008) Cook, DavidItem Review of Mia Bloom's Dying to Kill: The Allure of Suicide Terror(Phi Alpha Theta National History Honor Society, 2007) Cook, DavidItem Review of Michael Bonner's Jihad in Islamic History: Doctrines and Practice(Middle East Institute, 2007) Cook, DavidItem Review of Russell Gmirkin's Berossus and Genesis, Manetho and Exodus(Wiley, 2007-01) Cook, DavidItem Suicide Attacks or "Martyrdom Operations" in Contemporary Jihad Literature(University of California Press, 2002-10) Cook, DavidMartyrdom operations are a factor in contemporary radical Islam. These operations have their roots in classical jihad literature, but fundamentally are a by-product of widespread frustration and perceived humiliations on the part of Muslims. The attacks of 11 September 2001 are rooted within this tradition.Item Tamim al-Dari(Cambridge University Press, 1998) Cook, DavidItem The Ashab Al-Ukhdud: History and Hadith in a Martyrological Sequence(The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 2008) Cook, DavidItem The Implications of "Martyrdom Operations" for Contemporary Islam(Wiley for Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc, 2004) Cook, DavidThis article explores the implications of the prevalence of suicide attacks or 'martyrdom operations' in contemporary Islam. Historical and legal precedents from Islam and Christianity are adduced for the analysis and placed within the context of radical Islam