Document details

Terrorist Recruitment, Propaganda and Branding: Selling Terror Online

London; New York: Routledge (2023), x, 181 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 149-177, index

Series: Political violence

ISBN 978-1-003-28073-6 (ebook); 978-1-032-24918-6 (pbk)

"This book analyses the marketing techniques that terrorist organisations employ to encourage people to adopt their ideology and become devoted supporters. The book's central thesis is that due to the development of digital technologies and social media, terrorist groups are employing innovative marketing techniques and advertising strategies to foster an emotional connection with their audiences, particularly those in younger demographics. By conducting thematic and narrative analyses of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) propagandist magazines, as well as looking at the group's online communities, the book demonstrates that terrorist groups behave as commercial brands by establishing an emotional connection with their potential recruits. Specifically, groups and their potential supporters follow the logic of emotional choice. The book emphasizes that while ISIS became the first group that discovered and benefited from the power of marketing, it did not have a supernatural power and thus it is possible to find a response to it, which is particularly important now. The book eventually poses a question about whether terrorism has become the product of marketing in the same way as any mainstream consumer product is, and asks what can we do to battle the appeal of marketing-savvy terrorist groups." (Publisher description)
Introduction: Terrorism, Propaganda, and Branding: The (In)Visible Connection, 1
1 Emotional Choice: How to Make You “Buy”: What You Didn’t Plan To, 22
2 Heroes, Princesses, and True Believers: The Images ISIS “Sells”, 42
3 Narrative Advertising: Selling Caliphate through Stories, 57
4 Falling in Love with the Caliphate: Self-Illusion and Immersion into the Imaginary World, 72
5 Getting Lost in the Fantasy: “Jihadi Culture”, Excitement, and Bonding, 97
6 Feeling No Regret: Guilt-Coping Mechanisms in ISIS’s Propaganda, 113
Conclusion: Breaking the Terrorist Brand, 134