Comparing Civilian Support for Terrorism
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-6-2017
Publication Title
Journal of Strategic Security
DOI
10.5038/1944-0472.10.2.1562
ISSN
1944-0472
Abstract
Terrorism is an extreme form of political violence, that is inherently abhorrent in nature. Yet, it continues to attain enough support to continue and survive. The recent proliferation of Islamic State and its ever increasing domestic and international civilian support base urges immediate attention to this question. While most research holds that provision of public goods by terrorist groups is the primary cause for high levels of civilian support, I argue that, terrorist groups are more interested in resource extraction rather than resource provision. Additionally, these studies pay scant attention to existing resource structure, especially territorial and political control to explain terrorist-civilian interaction. This paper emphasizes the bi-directional nature of this interaction – a. perception of civilians by the terrorist group and b. terrorist group’s perception of the civilians. To analyze levels of civilian support for terrorism, I compare fifteen terrorist groups using qualitative comparative analysis and show how territory, political competition, ethnicity, target selection and organizational structure combine to explain conditions that lead terrorist groups to include or exclude civilian population for support. Based on the variance in support networks of terrorist groups, counter-terrorism policies should also differ. High civilian support indicates the need to use non-military methods to decrease the appeal of terrorist groups. However, terrorist groups with more diffused and multiple support structures need more collaborative and coercive measures to intercept all the possible links to the main group.
Recommended Citation
Bhattacharya, Srobana.
2017.
"Comparing Civilian Support for Terrorism."
Journal of Strategic Security, 10 (2): 1-32: Henley-Putnam School of Strategic Security with support from the University of South Florida Libraries.
doi: 10.5038/1944-0472.10.2.1562 source: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol10/iss2/2/
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/poli-sci-facpubs/183