Conceptualizing Terrorism argues that, in the post 9/11 world, the
need for an internationally agreed definition of terrorism is more
important than it has ever been, despite the challenges that such an
endeavour presents. Indeed, in a global context, where the term is
often applied selectively and pejoratively according to where one's
interests lie, there is a real need to instill some analytical quality
into the concept of terrorism, not least in order to prevent the term
being manipulated to justify all manner of counter-terrorism
responses. Not only is this important for the policymaking context but
it is also an imperative task within academia - in order to strengthen
the theoretical foundation of terrorism studies, for all other
terrorism related theories rest on what one means by terrorism in the
first place. Written from an academic perspective, the book explores
the prospects for terrorism as an analytical concept. Arguing that the
essence of this particular form of political violence lies in its
intent to generate a psychological impact beyond the immediate
victims, it goes on to propose the adoption of three key preliminary
assumptions that have implications for the definitional debate and
that it suggests might help to increase the analytical potential of
terrorism. The book then considers potential elements of a definition
before concluding with its own conceptualization of terrorism.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191063985
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter