Tore Hamming PhD is Director of Refslund Analytics, and a non-resident fellow at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation, King's College London. He has conducted fieldwork in Jordan, Iraq, Egypt, Morocco, Nigeria and Somalia, and written for 'Le Monde', 'Al Jazeera' and 'The Guardian', among others.
'An exceptional achievement and work of reference on the recent history of the jihadi movement.' -- Thomas Hegghammer, Senior Research Fellow, Norwegian Defence Research Establishment 'Books on ISIS that have emerged over the last few years make note of the fitna, but none explore it in this much depth. An empirically rich account from a world-leading expert that will undoubtedly take its place as a key reference for anyone seeking to make sense of al-Qaida and its legacies.' -- Michael A.K.G. Innes, author of Streets Without Joy 'The most detailed historiography to date of the jihadi movement. The history and the detail are magisterial--every other page makes the reader put down the book and think about some insight or another. I can see this becoming the standard text.' -- Mike Martin, author of An Intimate War and Why We Fight 'A meticulously sourced telling of how, and why, the global jihadist movement got to where it is today. Essential reading for anyone interested in terrorism and insurgency.' -- Charlie Winter, author of The Terrorist Image