This post is a long summary of a very interesting paper.
The reports findings can be summarised essentially as saying.
1) It has been shown that, world wide engineers tend to be more politically the the right than the majority of all graduates. Anecdotal evidence from DH, who is an engineer and who veers towards the political centre left, is that, generally, engineers are politically 'to the right of Genghis Khan' and only ever read the Daily Telegraph.
2) In the Middle East, engineering: together with medicine and natural sciences are seen as prestigious subjects and have high entry requirements. Enrolling for an engineering degree is a strong sign of above-average talent and ambition and unlike most other selection processes in the region, university admission to demanding subjects seems to be based on merit.
3) However, there are very high levels of unemployment in the Middle Eastern countries that provide these technically educated engineers. So, many engineers having worked and studied hard for their degrees find themselves going back home with the prestige of their degree but still unemployed and financially dependent on their families.
The exceptions to this broad generalisation are Saudi Arabia and Singapore. It can be suggested that, in Saudi, engineers in a country where many workers are immigrants and barred from professional employment are generally in well paid jobs. In Singapore, a highly advanced country with much demand for well educated workers, most graduates get jobs without difficulty.
Put this together with the information that most jihadists from western countries are those who for one reason or another have struggled to make their way in western society and are more likely to be drifters, converts to Islam (often while in prison) or with an addiction background. Once again, probably because job opportunities for graduate engineers mean that few are unemployed.
4) Many right wing extremist groups and fascists attract engineers. Both Mussolini and Hitler, initially, had strong support from technical and heavy industry and its professionals because they made things run well and efficiently. It was also noted that while the majority of Americans attracted to extreme right-wing, apocalyptic groups are mainly the poorly educated and dispossessed, a significant number of group leaders are engineers.
5) Islam itself shares a number of features found in all extreme right. These include a corporatist and mechanistic view of the ideal society. Modern Islamism sees itself as preserving the integrity of the existing social order.
Extremist Islamist propaganda rejects Western pluralism and argues for a unified, ordered society ruled by a strong Islamic leader, in which an authoritative division of labour is created between men and women, Muslims and non-Muslims, political leaders and their flock. The fear of social chaos is a feature of Islamist thought.
Furthermore, Islamic extremism shares many characteristics of right-wing extremism. One, which they call “monism”, is the tendency to see everything in black and white terms so that they repress all difference and dissent and ban the expression of opposing views
A second feature, “simplism”, the tendency to see simple single remedies for multi-factored activities and problems, which in turn is closely related to seeing history as shaped by the clash between good and evil, and conspiratorially ascribing the forces of evil to one identifiable foe.
The third feature, call “preservatism”, is typical only of the right. Unlike left-wing extremism which aims at broadening the lines of power and privilege, "preservatism" aims to restore a lost, often mythical order of privileges and authority, and emerges as a backlash against displacement or status deprivation in a period of sharp social change. It is an underlying craving for a lost order, its match with the radical Islamic ideology is undeniable: the theme of returning to the order of the prophet’s early community is omnipresent in most salafist and jihadist ideology.
Research is also quoted that shows that Engineers are four times more religious and conservative than social scientists and three times more so than people in the arts and humanities. The subjects at the top of the religious-conservative scale are, once again, exactly the same as we have in our jihadist sample.
CONCLUSIONS
So we have a group of highly able, highly educated socially and financially aspirant men who having, academically, hit the peaks, then find themselves condemned to unemployment and loss of status.
Coming from a conservatively religious society, and, possibly, with a mind set that looks for simple (mechanical?) answers to life's problems, extremist Islamic ideology provides an answer to their economic and personal problems.
Research shows that in societies where men like this can find economic success they are not attracted to jihadism. In these societies it is the poor, uneducated and dispossessed that look to jihadism for an nswer to life's problems
IF YOU HAVE GOT THIS FAR
The answer to jihadism, is not repression and increased security, it is economic growth to provide work and status for those who will otherwise turn to jihadism. This develops best in countries that are also politically liberal, democratic and open
In other words it is foreign aid and foreign investment used to encourage political freedom and economic growth that is the answer to jihadism.