While many young members of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood became politically disengaged in the wake of the 2013 military coup, others resorted to violence. Drawing upon fieldwork conducted in 2016/17, this article investigates the forces of radicalization among younger Brotherhood members after the coup. Rather than there being a positive correlation between repression and radicalization, I argue that the majority of rank-and-file movement members remained inclined against radicalism due to the effects of state repression, organizational schism, and transformative personal experiences
On 14 August 2013, the Egyptian security forces ended Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Cairo and Giza. ...
Although the popular protests that swept across the Middle East and North Africa in 2011 were short-...
During the 2010s islamist activism is on the rise across the Middle East and North Africa. In the li...
This article focuses on the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s relationship with violence after the 2013 ...
This article focuses on the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s relationship with violence after the 2013 ...
This article traces the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s trajectories in the aftermath of 2013 up to 20...
While most research on violent radicalisation often focuses on answering the question why people tak...
This article examines the trajectory and identity of the militant groups that resorted to political ...
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt struggles to find a strategy of survival. After the military coup in...
Research on political violence has increasingly adopted relational approaches to analysing processes...
This article traces the struggle between individual agency and organizational structures characteriz...
In this piece I examine how Islamist parties respond to military coups that oust them from power, lo...
How does the political ideology of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood evolve prior to reaching power an...
This study relies on the life story narratives of 48 young members of the Egyptian Muslim Brothers i...
In the wake of the Egypt's "January 25th Revolution" this thesis explores the background of some lea...
On 14 August 2013, the Egyptian security forces ended Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Cairo and Giza. ...
Although the popular protests that swept across the Middle East and North Africa in 2011 were short-...
During the 2010s islamist activism is on the rise across the Middle East and North Africa. In the li...
This article focuses on the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s relationship with violence after the 2013 ...
This article focuses on the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s relationship with violence after the 2013 ...
This article traces the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s trajectories in the aftermath of 2013 up to 20...
While most research on violent radicalisation often focuses on answering the question why people tak...
This article examines the trajectory and identity of the militant groups that resorted to political ...
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt struggles to find a strategy of survival. After the military coup in...
Research on political violence has increasingly adopted relational approaches to analysing processes...
This article traces the struggle between individual agency and organizational structures characteriz...
In this piece I examine how Islamist parties respond to military coups that oust them from power, lo...
How does the political ideology of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood evolve prior to reaching power an...
This study relies on the life story narratives of 48 young members of the Egyptian Muslim Brothers i...
In the wake of the Egypt's "January 25th Revolution" this thesis explores the background of some lea...
On 14 August 2013, the Egyptian security forces ended Muslim Brotherhood sit-ins in Cairo and Giza. ...
Although the popular protests that swept across the Middle East and North Africa in 2011 were short-...
During the 2010s islamist activism is on the rise across the Middle East and North Africa. In the li...