Jihadisme adalah sebuah neologisme yang dipakai dalam rujukan kepada "gerakan Islamis militan yang keberadaannya dianggap mengancam Barat" dan "berakar dalam politik Islam."[1] Mula-mula muncul dalam media Pakistan dan India, para wartawan Barat mengadopsi istilah tersebut setelah serangan 11 September 2001.[2] Sejak itu, istilah tersebut diterapkan kepada berbagai tokoh dan organisasi ekstrimis Islam, Islamismilitan, dan teroris yang memiliki ideologi yang berdasarkan pada gagasan Islam dari jihad.[3][4][5][6]
Referensi
^Compare: Firestone, Reuven (2012). ""Jihadism" as a new religious movement". Dalam Hammer, Olav; Rothstein, Mikael (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to New Religious Movements. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. hlm. 263–285. doi:10.1017/CCOL9780521196505.018. ISBN978-0-521-19650-5. LCCN2012015440. S2CID156374198. 'Jihadism' is a term that has been constructed in Western languages to describe militant Islamic movements that are perceived as existentially threatening to the West. Western media have tended to refer to Jihadism as a military movement which is rooted in political Islam. [...] 'Jihadism,' like the word jihad from which it is constructed, is a difficult term to precisely define. The meaning of Jihadism is a virtual moving target because it remains a recent neologism and no single, generally accepted meaning has been developed for it.
^Kesalahan pengutipan: Tag <ref> tidak sah;
tidak ditemukan teks untuk ref bernama Kramer
Sanchez, James (2007). Who's Who in Al-Qaeda & Jihadi Movements in South and Southeast Asia 19,906 Key Individuals, Organizations, Incidents, and Linkages. Lulu. ISBN978-1-4303-1473-8.
Vertigans, Stephen (2007). Militant Islam: A Sociology of Characteristics, Causes and Consequences. Routledge. ISBN978-0-415-41246-9.