Abstract
This article presents an analysis of different approaches to terrorist violence, with a particular focus on suicide terrorism, using the above mentioned levels of analysis as a conceptual framework to organize this study. In doing so, the article focuses primarily on four selected studies: Khashan's theory of collective Palestinian frustration operating at individual and structural levels; Pape's strategic theory of suicide terrorism, Devji's notion of global jihad, and Hammes' conceptualization of suicide terrorism as one of the strategies of Fourth Generation Warfare, all studied at a strategic level. Drawing on these analyses, as well as on Tilly, this article attempts to address the question of whether suicide terrorism represents a 'coherent phenomenon,' and whether there is, or may be, a generalized pattern which could account for all possible causes of martyrdom operations.
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CITATION STYLE
Ismayilov, M. (2010). Conceptualizing Terrorist Violence and Suicide Bombing. Journal of Strategic Security, 3(3). https://doi.org/10.5038/1944-0472.3.3.2
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