Muslim voices: The British Muslim response to Islamic video-polemic - An exploratory study

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dc.contributor.author Baines, Paul R. -
dc.contributor.author O'Shaughnessy, Nicholas J. -
dc.contributor.author Moloney, Kevin -
dc.contributor.author Richards, Barry -
dc.contributor.author Butler, Sara -
dc.contributor.author Gill, Mark -
dc.date.accessioned 2011-05-17T23:09:05Z
dc.date.available 2011-05-17T23:09:05Z
dc.date.issued 2006-12-01T00:00:00Z -
dc.identifier.citation Paul Baines, Nicholas J. O'Shaughnessy, Kevin Moloney, Barry Richards, Sara Butler and Mark Gill, Muslim voices: The British Muslim response to Islamic video-polemic - An exploratory study. Research Paper Series, The Cranfield forum for the latest thinking in management research. RP 3/06 en_UK
dc.identifier.isbn 1 85905 180 4 -
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/3852
dc.description.abstract This paper represents an attempt to deconstruct how Muslims living in Britain might respond to militant Islamist propaganda, as typified by elected ‘Jihadist’ video-clips obtained from the Internet, using a discussion group format. The article discusses the methodological difficulties of conducting research in the propaganda field using a conventional advertising-evaluation type approach, and provides a series of testable propositions to guide further research in the field. The central thesis is that ‘Jihadist’ communications focus around a meta- narrative of Muslims as a unitary grouping selfdefined as victim to Western aggression. While early indicators are that some genres of propaganda may be more effective than others (e.g. cartoons) in introducing this notion and some groupings more susceptible than others, we conclude that in general most Muslim respondents were unsympathetic to the messages contained in the propaganda clips. This paper will be of particular interest to managers of government social and market research programmes and media/PR practi en_UK
dc.language.iso en_UK en_UK
dc.subject Muslims en_UK
dc.subject Propaganda en_UK
dc.subject Internet en_UK
dc.title Muslim voices: The British Muslim response to Islamic video-polemic - An exploratory study en_UK
dc.type Working paper en_UK


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