Terrorism: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Craig Garaas-Johnson
(Just a start, will return to keep working on this page)
 
imported>Andrew M. Colarik
(Updated the article structure and added the content. History needs to be added, and the article filled out more.)
Line 1: Line 1:
The term refers to any act, usually violent, meant to coerce behavior for political ends.  
The term refers to any act, usually violent, meant to coerce behavior for political ends.  


==History==
==Definition==
The term terrorism has many definitions. Based on a survey of leading academics, there are at least 109 different definitions of terrorism (Schmidt & Jongman 1988). A compiled analysis of this survey identified the following recurring elements:


==Types of Terroristic Attacks==
Violence, force (83.5%)


==External Links==
Political (65%)
 
Fear, emphasis on terror (51%)
 
Threats (47%)
 
Psychological effects and anticipated reactions (41.5%)
 
Discrepancy between the targets and the victims (37.5%)
 
Intentional, planned, systematic, organized action (32%)
 
Methods of combat, strategy, tactics (30.5%)
 
 
The common elements of terrorism, as stated by Ganor (2002), are “the use of, or threat to use, violence”; “the goal is to attain political objectives”; and “the targets of terrorism are civilians”.
 
 
The most widely accepted legal definition is defined in Title 22 of the United States Code, Section 2656f(d), which states: The term ‘terrorism’ means premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by sub-national groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience.
 
 
==State Sponsorship of Terrorism==
There are basically three categories of state sponsorship of terrorism. These are as follows:
 
1. States supporting terrorism – “states that support terrorist organizations, providing financial aid, ideological support, military or operational assistance” (Ganor 2002)
 
2. States operating terrorism – “states that initiate, direct and perform terrorist activities  through groups outside their own institutions” (Ganor 2002)
 
3. States perpetrating terrorism – “states perpetrating terrorist acts abroad through their own official bodies” (Ganor 2002) or perpetrating terrorist acts domestically (i.e. within its own borders).
 
 
==Types of Terrorism==
Bio Terrorism – the release of germ or virus agents
 
Chemical Terrorism [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Chemical_terrorism] – the release of poisonous gases
 
Cyber Terrorism [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Cyber_Terrorism] – the electronic attack on critical infrastructure
 
Nuclear Terrorism – the use of nuclear materials in a terrorist attack
 
 
==References & Readings==
Conference of Foreign Ministers (2005). Kuala Lumpur Declaration on International Terrorism at [http://www.oic-oci.org/english/fm/11_extraordinary/declaration.htm]
 
Boyle, G. (2002). Theories of Justification and Political Violence: Examples from Four Groups. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
 
Brynen, R. (1990). Sanctuary and Survival: The PLO in Lebanon. Westview Press.
 
Committee of Privy Counsellors (2004, July). Review of Intelligence on Weapons of Mass Destruction. United Kingdom House of Lords.
 
Cragin, K. & Daly, S. (2004). The Dynamic Terrorist Threat, An Assessment of Group Motivations and Capabilities in a Changing World. Project Air Force.
 
Crelinsten, R. (2002). Analysing Terrorism and Counter-terrorism: A Communications Model. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
 
Emerson, S. (1997, August 4). The terrorist infrastructure. Wall Street Journal.
 
Ganor, B. (2002). Defining Terrorism: Is One Man’s Terrorist Another Man’s Freedom Fighter? Police Practice and Research. 3(4).
 
Hookway, J. (2002). Terrorist Bombings Hit Philippines --- Series of Weekend Explosions Kill 10 People, Highlighting Militants' Threat to Region. Wall Street Journal.
 
Hufbauer, G., Schott, J. & Oegg, B. (2005). Policy Brief 01-11: Using Sanctions to Fight Terrorism at [http://www.iie.com/publications/pb/pb01-11.htm]
 
Israeli, R. (2002). A Manual of Islamic Fundamentalist Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(4).
 
Israeli, R. (2002). Western Democracies and Islamic Fundamentalist Violence. Terrorism and Political Violence. 12(4).
 
Lenzer, R. & Vardi, N. (2004). Terror Inc.. Forbes.
 
National Commission on Terrorism (2005). Countering the Changing Threat of International Terrorism at [http://www.gpo.gov/nct/]
 
Nedoroscik, J. (2002). Extremist Groups in Egypt. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).
 
Perl, R. (2005). Terrorism, The Media, and the Government: Perspectives, Trends, and Options for Policymakers. CRS Issue Brief at [http://www.fas.org/irp/crs/crs-terror.htm]
 
Post, J., Sprinzak, E. & Denny, L. (2003). The Terrorist in Their Own Words: Interviews with 35 Incarcerated Middle Eastern Terrorists. Terrorism and Political Violence. 15(1).
 
Sedgwick, M. (2004). Al-Qaeda and the Nature of Religious Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).
 
Schmidt, A. & Jongman, A. (1988). Political Terrorism. SWIDOC and Transaction Books.
 
Trimble, D. (2004). The Lesson of Northern Ireland. Wall Street Journal.
 
Tucker, D. (2001). Chapter Seven: Combating International Terrorism. The Terrorism
 
Threat and U.S. Government Response: Operational and Organizational Factors. USAF Institute for National Security Studies.
 
Weinberg, L., Pedahzur, A. & Hirsch-Hoefler, S. (2004). The Challenges of Conceptualizing Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).
 
Wentz, L. (2002). Lessons From Kosovo: The KFOR Experience. CCRP.

Revision as of 21:25, 12 April 2007

The term refers to any act, usually violent, meant to coerce behavior for political ends.

Definition

The term terrorism has many definitions. Based on a survey of leading academics, there are at least 109 different definitions of terrorism (Schmidt & Jongman 1988). A compiled analysis of this survey identified the following recurring elements:

Violence, force (83.5%)

Political (65%)

Fear, emphasis on terror (51%)

Threats (47%)

Psychological effects and anticipated reactions (41.5%)

Discrepancy between the targets and the victims (37.5%)

Intentional, planned, systematic, organized action (32%)

Methods of combat, strategy, tactics (30.5%)


The common elements of terrorism, as stated by Ganor (2002), are “the use of, or threat to use, violence”; “the goal is to attain political objectives”; and “the targets of terrorism are civilians”.


The most widely accepted legal definition is defined in Title 22 of the United States Code, Section 2656f(d), which states: The term ‘terrorism’ means premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by sub-national groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience.


State Sponsorship of Terrorism

There are basically three categories of state sponsorship of terrorism. These are as follows:

1. States supporting terrorism – “states that support terrorist organizations, providing financial aid, ideological support, military or operational assistance” (Ganor 2002)

2. States operating terrorism – “states that initiate, direct and perform terrorist activities through groups outside their own institutions” (Ganor 2002)

3. States perpetrating terrorism – “states perpetrating terrorist acts abroad through their own official bodies” (Ganor 2002) or perpetrating terrorist acts domestically (i.e. within its own borders).


Types of Terrorism

Bio Terrorism – the release of germ or virus agents

Chemical Terrorism [1] – the release of poisonous gases

Cyber Terrorism [2] – the electronic attack on critical infrastructure

Nuclear Terrorism – the use of nuclear materials in a terrorist attack


References & Readings

Conference of Foreign Ministers (2005). Kuala Lumpur Declaration on International Terrorism at [3]

Boyle, G. (2002). Theories of Justification and Political Violence: Examples from Four Groups. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).

Brynen, R. (1990). Sanctuary and Survival: The PLO in Lebanon. Westview Press.

Committee of Privy Counsellors (2004, July). Review of Intelligence on Weapons of Mass Destruction. United Kingdom House of Lords.

Cragin, K. & Daly, S. (2004). The Dynamic Terrorist Threat, An Assessment of Group Motivations and Capabilities in a Changing World. Project Air Force.

Crelinsten, R. (2002). Analysing Terrorism and Counter-terrorism: A Communications Model. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).

Emerson, S. (1997, August 4). The terrorist infrastructure. Wall Street Journal.

Ganor, B. (2002). Defining Terrorism: Is One Man’s Terrorist Another Man’s Freedom Fighter? Police Practice and Research. 3(4).

Hookway, J. (2002). Terrorist Bombings Hit Philippines --- Series of Weekend Explosions Kill 10 People, Highlighting Militants' Threat to Region. Wall Street Journal.

Hufbauer, G., Schott, J. & Oegg, B. (2005). Policy Brief 01-11: Using Sanctions to Fight Terrorism at [4]

Israeli, R. (2002). A Manual of Islamic Fundamentalist Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(4).

Israeli, R. (2002). Western Democracies and Islamic Fundamentalist Violence. Terrorism and Political Violence. 12(4).

Lenzer, R. & Vardi, N. (2004). Terror Inc.. Forbes.

National Commission on Terrorism (2005). Countering the Changing Threat of International Terrorism at [5]

Nedoroscik, J. (2002). Extremist Groups in Egypt. Terrorism and Political Violence. 14(2).

Perl, R. (2005). Terrorism, The Media, and the Government: Perspectives, Trends, and Options for Policymakers. CRS Issue Brief at [6]

Post, J., Sprinzak, E. & Denny, L. (2003). The Terrorist in Their Own Words: Interviews with 35 Incarcerated Middle Eastern Terrorists. Terrorism and Political Violence. 15(1).

Sedgwick, M. (2004). Al-Qaeda and the Nature of Religious Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).

Schmidt, A. & Jongman, A. (1988). Political Terrorism. SWIDOC and Transaction Books.

Trimble, D. (2004). The Lesson of Northern Ireland. Wall Street Journal.

Tucker, D. (2001). Chapter Seven: Combating International Terrorism. The Terrorism

Threat and U.S. Government Response: Operational and Organizational Factors. USAF Institute for National Security Studies.

Weinberg, L., Pedahzur, A. & Hirsch-Hoefler, S. (2004). The Challenges of Conceptualizing Terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence. 16(4).

Wentz, L. (2002). Lessons From Kosovo: The KFOR Experience. CCRP.