Dec, 2012
Suicide Terrorism in America?: The Complex Social Conditions of This Phenomenon and the Implications for Homeland Security
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
From the thesis abstract: "This research applies social identity and intergroup relations theory to the phenomenon of suicide terrorism and develops a framework that can be used to better understand the threat of suicide terrorism and the implications for United States homeland security. Suicide terrorism is growing worldwide and is becoming more geographically diverse. Traditional studies of suicide terrorism tend to seek causal explanations of the phenomenon. This research uses a grounded theory approach to study the phenomenon that seeks to offer insight, enhance understanding, and provide a meaningful framework for understanding. The findings of this research recommend an alternate framework for understanding suicide terrorism based on the application of social identity theory and intergroup relations theory. Through the identification of alternative normative accounts in the choices that individuals make, this research is able to identify the complex social conditions of suicide terrorism and argues that the phenomenon is driven by powerful socio-cultural systems that prey on an individual's basic identity needs." A 9-min, 44-second video interview on this thesis is also available at the following link: [www.hsdl.org/?abstract&did= 730385]
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DateDec, 2012
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CopyrightPublic Domain
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Retrieved FromNaval Postgraduate School, Dudley Knox Library: www.nps.edu/Library/index.aspx
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Formatpdf
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Media Typeapplication/pdf
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SourceCohort NCR1103/1104; CHDS Outstanding Thesis
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