Dr Kiriloi Ingram
Lecturer
School of Political Science and International Studies
Co-Convenor, Bachelor of International Studies
Journal Articles
                  Ingram, Kiriloi M. and Campion, Kristy (2024). Of heroes and mothers: locating gender in ideological narratives of Salafi-Jihadist and extreme right propaganda. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 1-27. doi: 10.1080/1057610x.2024.2322758
                
              
                  Phillips, Justin Bonest, Ingram, Kiriloi M. and Campion, Kristy (2024). Gendered Extremism in the Pacific on 4chan: A Mixed-methods Exploration of Australian and New Zealanders’ Concepts of Women, Gender, and Sexual Violence on /Pol/. Terrorism and Political Violence, 1-22. doi: 10.1080/09546553.2024.2384044
                
              
                  Ingram, Kiriloi (2021). Centralising women in P/CVE and peacebuilding programme design. Journal for Deradicalization (28), 67-107.
                
              
                  Ingram, Kiriloi M. (2021). An Analysis of Islamic State's Gendered Propaganda Targeted Towards Women: From Territorial Control to Insurgency. Terrorism and Political Violence, 35 (2), 338-354. doi: 10.1080/09546553.2021.1919637
                
              
                  Ingram, Kiriloi (2017). IS’s appeal to western women: policy recommendations. Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism Studies, 8 (4). doi: 10.19165/2017.2.04
                
              Conference Paper
                  Kiriloi M. Ingram (2025). Gendered Extremism in the Pacific on 4chan: A Mixed-methods Exploration of Australian and New Zealanders’ Concepts of Women, Gender, and Sexual Violence on /Pol/. Oceanic Conference on International Studies, Sydney, 9-11 July 2025.
                
              Research Report
                  Ingram, Kiriloi (2024). Why gender matters in violent extremist propaganda strategy. The Hague, Netherlands: International Centre for Counter Terrorism. doi: 10.19165/2024.7965
                
              Thesis
                  Ingram, Kiriloi (2022). The Islamic State's Gendered Propaganda: Mobilising Women and Men from Territorial Control to Insurgency. PhD Thesis, School of Political Science and International Studies, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/5e62009