Dr. Paul Stott
Dr. Paul Stott is a Research Fellow in the Centre on Radicalisation and Terrorism at the Henry Jackson Society and a Tutor in the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy at SOAS University of London.
He received his PhD from the University of East Anglia in 2015 for the research “British Jihadism: The Detail and the Denial”, having earlier obtained an MSc (Distinction) in Terrorism Studies at the University of East London. His research areas focus on terrorism, international security, Islamism, the political fringe and conspiracy theory.
His book on British Jihadism will be published by Routledge in 2018.
Contributions
Here you will find contributions by Dr. Paul Stott, Fellow at EFSAS.
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Network of Networks - The Muslim Brotherhood in Europe
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Iranian Influence Networks in the United Kingdom: Audit and Analysis
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Bangladesh at 50? In Britain, you could be forgiven for missing it
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Three points of the Triangle: Islamic State, Britain, Indian subcontinent
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Side-event/Webinar on the sidelines of 45th Session of UNHRC
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Beyond Magnitsky: Britain, the Subcontinent and Dirty Money
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What next for Omar Saeed Sheikh?
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British jihadism’s familiar connections: Usman Khan, Al Muhajiroun and Pakistan
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Side-event at the 42nd Session of the UNHRC
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott (SOAS) during EFSAS Seminar in VU University
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott (SOAS) during EFSAS Seminar in EU Parliament
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Side-event at the 39th Session of the UNHRC
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Side-event at the 37th Session of the UNHRC
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Side-event at the 36th Session of the UNHRC
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Speech of Dr. Paul Stott during EFSAS Conference at the University of Leicester
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When India and Pakistan start wrestling again
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Trump, CPEC and security: Interesting times ahead - Part two
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Is CPEC East India Company 2? - Part one
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Hafiz Saeed: A Series of Curious Developments
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Terrorism and Responses to Terror
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Why Mehdi Hasan is half right and half wrong on foreign policy as a cause of terrorism
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A brief history of Jihadism: The British South Asian Nexus
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UK involved in legal, political frameworks of some former colonies
All views expressed are of the author and do not necessarily coincide with the views held by EFSAS