 There are many individual reasons why someone wants to join terrorism. So many of these individuals don't feel part of Australian society. They feel that they've been alienated from Australian society. They don't trust Australian authorities. They think that the government is overly focusing on the Muslim community. IS has a very good media strategy. They're one of the best at using social media and internet to recruit others. Even the recent video of the beheading of James Foley was a classic example. I think this video had a number of messages, but one of them was to encourage others to join. That might sound crazy, such a brutal video, but they were showing that we finally can get our one up against the West. The rest have been the oppressors of the Muslim world over generations. We've seen the atrocities against Muslim brothers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Now we can get one back at the West. I always get concerned that there's a lot of attention and focus on terrorism has been very religiously focused and blamed it on Islam. But really, in this case, I think religion has been hijacked to a great extent by a lot of underlying causes getting these people involved in terrorism overseas. Some of these guys are going straight into fighting without any training whatsoever. In the past we did see training camps in Pakistan and border regions of Afghanistan or training camps in the Philippines, training camps in Indonesia where individuals would go through combat training prior to going over to join the conflict. Things that we really need to consider a lot harder is what are we going to do with these foreign fighters when they turn to Australia? I think many of these fighters, those that have breached or broken Australian law whether the new legislation or the existing legislation, many of those will probably into the judicial system and some will be convicted. Those that have broken the law will be on remand for a period of time. So how do we house these inmates? How are we going to look after them? How are we going to try and change these inmates if we can? So there will be sort of intervention programs to try and turn them away from terrorism. We've already seen that our existing strategies in prison haven't worked. Khalid Sharif, for example, spent time in prison and we've seen that he has left prison and gone straight back into terrorism or over a period of time back into terrorism. So obviously we're not doing the right thing. My suggestion and some of my research would suggest that inmates, terrorist inmates are better off with mainstream prison population rather than actually being isolated or segregated from other inmates. Inmate culture is a very strong influence and there are inmate subgroups within prison that can influence inmates whether they come out better criminals or whether they come out terrorists is another matter and that's to be seen but I would suggest there's less chance of terrorist recidivism if they're in the mainstream prison population.