Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Refugee" in English language version.
For the most part, homegrown terrorists have been citizens and residents born, raised, and educated within the countries they attack and groups have been self-generated and independently organized. A recent study of over 200 European jihadists, for instance, found that over 90% were residents of a European country and almost 60% retained European citizenship.- Citing Edwin Bakker, Jihadi Terrorists in Europe: Their Characteristics and the Circumstances in which they Joined the Jihad. Issue 2 of Clingendael security paper, Nederlands Instituut voor Internationale Betrekkingen Clingendael (The Hague: Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2006), 36–7. ISBN 9789050311137.
Refugees [...] are an inherent part of international politics [...]. The refugee and the state system are two sides of the same coin, and the former cannot be understood without reference to the latter. The 'figure of the refugee' is an integral part of the international system, symbolizing the failure of the breakdown of the state-citizen-territory relationship assumed by the state system (Haddad 2008). [...] Forced migration is, by definition, indicative of a breakdown of the nation-state system. All forms of forced migration go to the core of questions of state sovereignty, and invite a host of other questions relating to security and the international political economy.
For the most part, homegrown terrorists have been citizens and residents born, raised, and educated within the countries they attack and groups have been self-generated and independently organized. A recent study of over 200 European jihadists, for instance, found that over 90% were residents of a European country and almost 60% retained European citizenship.- Citing Edwin Bakker, Jihadi Terrorists in Europe: Their Characteristics and the Circumstances in which they Joined the Jihad. Issue 2 of Clingendael security paper, Nederlands Instituut voor Internationale Betrekkingen Clingendael (The Hague: Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2006), 36–7. ISBN 9789050311137.
For the most part, homegrown terrorists have been citizens and residents born, raised, and educated within the countries they attack and groups have been self-generated and independently organized. A recent study of over 200 European jihadists, for instance, found that over 90% were residents of a European country and almost 60% retained European citizenship.- Citing Edwin Bakker, Jihadi Terrorists in Europe: Their Characteristics and the Circumstances in which they Joined the Jihad. Issue 2 of Clingendael security paper, Nederlands Instituut voor Internationale Betrekkingen Clingendael (The Hague: Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2006), 36–7. ISBN 9789050311137.
For the most part, homegrown terrorists have been citizens and residents born, raised, and educated within the countries they attack and groups have been self-generated and independently organized. A recent study of over 200 European jihadists, for instance, found that over 90% were residents of a European country and almost 60% retained European citizenship.- Citing Edwin Bakker, Jihadi Terrorists in Europe: Their Characteristics and the Circumstances in which they Joined the Jihad. Issue 2 of Clingendael security paper, Nederlands Instituut voor Internationale Betrekkingen Clingendael (The Hague: Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2006), 36–7. ISBN 9789050311137.