Essay Topic Hub

Jihad
Essays

219+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

219 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Jihad is a concept rooted in Islamic theology that carries meanings ranging from personal spiritual struggle to organized holy war, and its complexity makes it a recurring subject across disciplines including religious studies, political science, history, and ethics. Students encounter it in courses on world religions, international security, and comparative culture, where the tension between its internal and external dimensions raises genuinely difficult questions about belief, society, and political violence. Works like Benjamin Barber's Jihad vs. McWorld extend the term into broader cultural theory, framing it as a symbol of resistance to globalization, which further expands the academic conversation beyond strictly theological ground.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some focus on the textual and doctrinal, examining how jihad is presented in the Koran and how Islamic belief shapes its interpretation. Others take a comparative religious angle, setting Islam alongside Christianity to trace historical and theological differences, particularly around the period of 700 CE. Political and security-focused essays analyze organizations like Al-Qaeda, profile key leaders, and assess policy responses such as France's homeland security challenges. A smaller number engage ethical and moral frameworks to evaluate the justifications offered for political violence.

A strong essay on jihad begins by establishing which definition of the term is under examination, since conflating the spiritual and military senses is the most common analytical error. Thesis statements that take a clear position — on doctrine, historical context, or policy implications — tend to hold up better than broad surveys. Evidence drawn from religious texts, historical events, or specific case studies carries more weight than generalized claims about Islam or Muslim society as a whole.

Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religion and compatibility with democratic systems
¶ … Religion of Islam Compatible with Democracy?
Paper Undergraduate
Intelligence and counter-terrorism protection strategies
This paper is about intelligence, counter terrorism, and protection services. In particular, it examines six different journal articles from three publications, Foreign Affairs, International Security, and the Middle East Journal. Different biases and approaches to the topic of terrorism are pursued by the contributors of each journal, and therefore we see a diverse mix of opinions on the matter.
Paper Undergraduate
Radicalization concepts and processes
The forces of economic, political and religious distinction which have driven a wedge between the Western World and the Arab world are steeped in a long history of divergent interests.
Paper Undergraduate
Critical evaluation of Prophet Muhammad in Western scholarship
¶ … Perception and Portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad within the Western Scholarship
Paper Undergraduate
Muslim Communities the Muslim Community:
The Muslim Community: Some Perspectives and Misconceptions
Research Paper Undergraduate
Islam, Violence, and Jihad: Quranic Verses in Context
Nowadays there is a widespread misunderstanding of the word 'Jihad'. People interpret Jihad as "any war fought by any Muslim for any reason." But originally Jihad is taken from the Arabic word Ja'hada which means "to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Islam in Spain Islamic Spain
Islamic Spain has captured the fascination of many historian and writers. How the entire Iberian Peninsula came under Islamic rule and what was done during the rule are some questions are historians have tried to focus…
Essay Doctorate
Terrorism Justified? According to Purpura (2007), Terrorism
According to Purpura (2007), terrorism as a term does not have a fixed definition. This effectively means that its usage and application is largely hinged on a myriad of viewpoints, be they political or religious.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt Following
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, many observers in the West were heard to lament the passing of the "good old days" of the Cold War when the enemy was clearly known and its geographic borders…
Paper Doctorate
Homeland security overview and policy frameworks
Homeland Security – Article Critique Introduction ONE: The article by Pat Proctor of Kansas State University was published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Strategic Security in 2012. TWO: The point of this article is not so much posing a question but presenting a proposal. The proposal is directed at the United States, suggesting in strong terms how the United States (and presumably its allies) could and should engage in "…mass politics" which Proctor calls "war without violence" (Proctor, 2012, 47). The theme of the article is the remarkable transformation that has taken place in Arab countries (called the "Arab Spring") such as Egypt, Tunisia, Syria, Libya and elsewhere in the Middle East.