Hassan Abu Haniya

Non-resident researcher at the Policy and Society Institute, specializing in Islamic movements. He has numerous publications and contributions, including “Women and Politics from the Perspective of Islamic Movements in Jordan”; co-author of “Jihadi Salafism in Jordan after the Killing of Zarqawi: Identity Approach, Leadership Crisis, and Vision Ambiguity”; and co-author of “Conservative Salafism: The Strategy of Islamizing Society and the Ambiguous Relationship with the State”, “Sufi Orders: The Spiritual Paths of God—Adaptation and Renewal in the Context of Modernization”, “The Islamic Solution in Jordan: Islamists, the State, and the Stakes of Democracy and Security”, “Islamic State Organization: The Sunni Crisis and the Struggle for Global Jihadism”, “Female Martyrs: Jihadi Feminism from Al-Qaeda to the Islamic State”, and “Hurras al-Din Organization: The Rise and Fall of Al-Qaeda in the Arab Mashreq”. He recently contributed to the book “Islamists in Jordan: Religion, State, and Society”.
Extremism and Terrorism

Is ISIS revival in Syria possible?

Since the beginning of this month, the “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria” has executed more than four major assaults against Syrian regime forces, local Sunni and Shiite militias loyal to it. Also, at the beginning of this year, the organization’s military activities have escalated, its methods have diversified, and its geographical targets in Syria have expanded, despite the loss…

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Commentaries

International reports monitor the new rise of ISIS

Over the past few months, reports warning of the possibility of the return of ISIS have proliferated, which are based on several field indicators, foremost among which are the unchanged political, economic, and social causes and conditions that led to the rise of the organization, the fragility of the Middle East, regional political and sectarian conflicts, the lack of a…

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