Abstract
Since the terrorist attacks of September 11,2001, global jihadists have continued to target
American businesses and, in some cases, jihadists have used their legitimate business
affiliations to facilitate terrorist activity. Terrorism has therefore shifted the business
paradigm towards the incorporation of terrorist detection into corporate risk management.
With minimal research in the scholarly business literature to delineate the behaviors of
Islamic radicalization, corporate risk managers are hindered in detecting radicalizing
jihadists in the workplace.