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      Female Terrorism and Militancy
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      Book

      Female Terrorism and Militancy

      DOI link for Female Terrorism and Militancy

      Female Terrorism and Militancy book

      Agency, Utility, and Organization

      Female Terrorism and Militancy

      DOI link for Female Terrorism and Militancy

      Female Terrorism and Militancy book

      Agency, Utility, and Organization
      Edited ByCindy D. Ness
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2007
      eBook Published 11 December 2007
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203937266
      Pages 256
      eBook ISBN 9780203937266
      Subjects Politics & International Relations, Social Sciences
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      Ness, C.D. (Ed.). (2007). Female Terrorism and Militancy: Agency, Utility, and Organization (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203937266

      ABSTRACT

      This edited volume provides a window on the many forces that structure and shape why women and girls participate in terrorism and militancy, as well as on how states have come to view, treat, and strategize against them.

      Females who carry out terrorist acts have historically been seen as mounting a challenge to the social order by violating conventional notions of gender and power, and their participation in such acts has tended to be viewed as being either as a passive victim or a feminist warrior. This volume seeks to move beyond these portrayals, to examine some of the structuring conditions that play a part in a girl or woman’s decision to commit violence. Amidst the contextual factors informing her involvement, the volume seeks also to explore the political agency of the female terrorist or militant. Several of the articles are based on research where authors had direct contact with female terrorists or militants who committed acts of political violence, or with witnesses to such acts.

       

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |10 pages

      Introduction

      ByCINDY D . NESS

      chapter 1|26 pages

      In the name of the cause: Women’s work in secular and religious terrorism

      ByCINDY D . NESS

      chapter 2|12 pages

      Women fighting in jihad?

      ByDAVID COOK

      chapter 3|20 pages

      Beyond the bombings: Analyzing female suicide bombers

      ByDEBRA ZEDALIS

      chapter 4|15 pages

      (Gendered) war

      ByCAROLYN NORDSTROM

      chapter 5|16 pages

      The evolving participation of Muslim women in Palestine, Chechnya, and the global jihadi movement

      ByKARLA CUNNINGHAM

      chapter 6|22 pages

      Black widows and beyond: Understanding the motivations and life trajectories of Chechen female terrorists

      ByANNE SPECKHARD, KHAPTA AKHMEDOVA

      chapter 7|9 pages

      The black widows: Chechen women join the fight for independence – and Allah

      ByANNE NIVAT

      chapter 8|15 pages

      Palestinian female suicide bombers: Virtuous heroines or damaged goods?

      ByYORAM SCHWEITZER

      chapter 9|21 pages

      Martyrs or murderers? Victims or victimizers? The voices of would-be Palestinian female suicide bombers

      ByANAT BERKO, EDNA EREZ

      chapter 10|16 pages

      Girls as “weapons of terror” in Northern Uganda and Sierra Leonean armed groups

      BySUSAN MCKAY

      chapter 11|18 pages

      From freedom birds to water buffaloes: Women terrorists in Asia

      ByMARGARET GONZALEZ - PEREZ

      chapter 12|16 pages

      Women and organized racial terrorism in the United States

      ByKATHLEEN M . BLEE

      chapter 13|19 pages

      The portrayal of female terrorists in the media: Similar framing patterns in the news coverage of women in politics and in terrorism

      ByBRIGITTE L . NACOS
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