Introduction I. The concept and origins of media jihad 1.1. Understanding online radicalisation 1.2. Why do Salafi-jihadi violent extremists use the internet? 1.3. Between theology and propaganda: Exploring the concept of media jihad 1.4. A brief history of media jihad 1.4.1. The experimental phase: since the 1990s to the onset of the War on Terror 1.4.2. Global expansion: from the War on Terror to the Arab Spring 1.4.3. From apex to crisis: The evolution of the Islamic State’s media machine II. The nature of the Salafi-jihadi strategic communication on the internet 2.1. Exploring classic formats of media jihad 2.2. How do the media mujahideen influence the target audiences? 2.3. Measuring the Salafi-jihadi terrorist propaganda output in the post-pandemic period 2.3.1. What do we know about the past Salafi-jihadi propaganda production? 2.3.2. Methodological considerations 2.3.3. Measuring the Salafi-jihadi terrorist propaganda output in 2023 and 2024 2.3.4. Technical features and thematic landscape of the Salafi-jihadi propaganda (2023-2024) 2.4. Organisation of the Salafi-jihadi media apparatus 2.5. The impact of generative artificial intelligence on the Salafi-jihadi propaganda production III. Mapping the structure and evolution of the Salafi-jihadi information ecosystem 3.1. Identifying the core layers of the Salafi-jihadi propaganda distribution networks 3.1.1. The surface web 3.1.2. The deep web 3.1.3. The dark web 3.1.4. Messaging apps 3.2. The Salafi-jihadi information ecosystem in 2023-2024: A social network analysis 3.2.1. Methodology 3.2.2. Structure and evolution of the Salafi-jihadi information ecosystem (2023-2024) 3.2.2.1. Quantitative findings
3.2.2.2. Identifying essential features of the Salafi-jihadi information ecosystem (2023-2024) 3.3. Learning and adapting: Media mujahideen responses to online preventing and countering violent extremism efforts Conclusions
Biography
Miron Lakomy is a Professor at the Institute of Political Sciences, the University of Silesia, Poland, and a non-resident fellow at the ITSTIME research centre in Italy. He is an open-source intelligence investigator with over 10 years of experience in analysing online terrorist operations. During his academic career, he held visiting research positions at the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, the European University Institute, and the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan. He is a member of the EU Knowledge Hub on Prevention of Radicalisation Research Committee.
"Understanding Media Jihad is an important contribution to understanding how both al-Qaeda and ISIS have revolutionized terrorist communications. Miron Lakomy charts the trajectory of these Salafi-Jihadi movements' harnessing of the internet and social media as a tool of ongoing radicalization and recruitment thus underscoring the pernicious resilience of the threat each continues to pose."
Professor Bruce Hoffman, FRHistS, author of Inside Terrorism and faculty member at the Center for Jewish Civilization and Center for Security Studies, Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, United States.






