Waves of Political Terrorism (2024)

  • Allen, T., & Vlassenroot, K. (2010). The Lord’s Resistance Army: Myth and reality. Palgrave Macmillan.

  • Anderson, J. H. (1995). The neo-Nazi menace in Germany. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 18(1), 39–46.

  • Anderson, J. L. (2010). Che Guevara: A revolutionary life (Rev. ed.). Grove Press.

  • Axe, D., & Hamilton, T. (2013). Army of God: Joseph Kony’s war in Central Africa. Public Affairs.

  • Barkun, M. (1986). Disaster and the millennium. Syracuse University Press.

  • Barkun, M. (1996). Millennialism and violence. F. Cass.

  • Barkun, M. (1997). Religion and the racist right: The origins of the Christian Identity movement. University of North Carolina Press.

  • Begin, M. (1977). The revolt (Rev. ed.). Nash.

  • Bergman, J. (1983). Vera Zasulich: A biography. Stanford University Press.

  • Berti, B. (2013). Armed political organizations: From conflict to integration. Johns Hopkins University Press.

  • Bolton, J. (2012). Worlds of dissent: Charter 77, the plastic people of the universe, and Czech culture under Communism. Harvard University Press.

  • Borchgrevink, B. (2013). A Norwegian tragedy: Anders Behring Breivik and the massacre on Utøya. Polity Press.

  • Bourget, C. (2019). Islamic schools in France: Minority integration and separatism in Western society. Springer.

  • Brand, L. A. (1988). Palestinians in the Arab world: Institution building and the search for state. Columbia University Press.

  • Brar, K. S. (1993). Operation Blue Star: The true story. UBS.

  • Brodie, B. (1973). War and politics. Macmillan.

  • Brown, J. (2015). Maoism at the grassroots. Harvard University Press.

  • Bureau of Intelligence and Research. (2015, July 21). Independent states in the world. U.S. State Department.

  • Butt, S., & Byman, D. (2020). Right-wing extremism: The Russian connection. Survival, 62(2), 137–52.

  • Byman, D. (1998). The logic of ethnic terrorism. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 21, 149–169.

  • Calvert, J. (2013). Sayyid Qutb and the origins of radical Islamism. Oxford University Press.

  • Celso, A. N. (2015). The Islamic State and Boko Haram: Fifth wave Jihadist terror groups. Orbis, 59(2), 249–268.

  • Celso, A. (2020). The synergy between White supremacist and Jihadist violence in the targeting of religious institutions. Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 7(7), 580–603.

  • Clarke, T. (1981). By blood and fire: The attack on the King David Hotel. Hutchinson.

  • Cline, L. E. (2013). The Lord’s Resistance Army. Psi Guides to Terrorists, Insurgents, and Armed Groups. Praeger.

  • Cooper, J. M. (2009). Woodrow Wilson: A biography. Alfred A. Knopf.

  • Coughlin, C. (2009). Khomeini’s ghost: The Iranian revolution and the rise of militant Islam. Ecco.

  • Daniel, F. J. (2016, March 25). Cuba’s journey from rock labor brigades to the Rolling Stones. Reuters.

  • Degregori, C. I., Stern, S. J., Appelbaum, N., Drzewieniecki, J., Flores, H., & Hershberg, E. (2012). How difficult it is to be God: Shining path's politics of war in Peru, 1980–1999. University of Wisconsin Press.

  • Devlin, J. F. (1991). The Baath party: Rise and metamorphosis. The American Historical Review, 96(5), 1396–1407.

  • Dirlik, A. (1991). Anarchism in the Chinese revolution. University of California Press.

  • Easat-Daas, A. (2020). State, religion and Muslims: Between discrimination and protection at the legislative. Executive and judicial levels—a case study of France. In M. Saral & S. O. Bahçecik (Eds.), State, religion and Muslims (pp. 197–248). Brill.

  • Eichstaedt, P. H. (2013). First kill your family: Child soldiers of Uganda and the Lord’s Resistance Army. Lawrence Hill Books.

  • Ellwood, R. S. (1994). The Sixties spiritual awakening: American religion moving from modern to postmodern. Rutgers University Press.

  • Filiu, J-P. (2011). Apocalypse in Islam. University of California Press.

  • Filiu, J-P. (2015). From deep state to Islamic state: The Arab counter-revolution and its jihadi legacy Oxford University Press.

  • Follain, J. (2011). Jackal: The complete story of the legendary terrorist, Carlos the Jackal. Arcade.

  • Gardell, M. (2003). Gods of the blood: The pagan revival and white separatism. Duke University Press.

  • Gerges, F. A. (2011). The rise and fall of al-Qaeda. Oxford University Press.

  • Goraya, O. S. (2013). Operation Blue Star and after: An eyewitness account. Onkar S. Goraya.

  • Gordis, D. (2014). Menachem Begin: The battle for Israel’s soul. Nextbook/Schocken.

  • Gorriti, G. (1999). The Shining Path: A history of the millenarian war in Peru. Latin America in Translation. University of North Carolina Press.

  • Graaf, B. de, & Schmid, A. P. (2016). Terrorists on trial: A performative perspective. Leiden University Press.

  • Gunaratna, R. (2003). Inside al Qaeda: Global network of terror. Berkeley Books.

  • Harrison, J. (2009). International aviation and terrorism: Evolving threats, evolving security. Political Violence. Routledge.

  • Hashim, A. S. (2013). When counterinsurgency wins: Sri Lanka’s defeat of the Tamil Tigers. University of Pennsylvania Press.

  • Hoffman, B. (2006). Inside terrorism. Columbia University Press.

  • Hoffman, B. (2018). Inside terrorism. Columbia University Press.

  • Hoffman, B., & Rand Corporation. (2003). Al Qaeda, trends in terrorism, and future potentialities: An assessment. RAND.

  • Hoffman, D. C. (2015). Quantifying and qualifying charisma: A theoretical framework for measuring the presence of charismatic authority in terrorist groups. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 38(9), 710–733.

  • Holbrook, D. (2014). The al-Qaeda doctrine: The framing and evolution of the leadership’s public discourse. New Directions in Terrorism Studies. Bloomsbury.

  • Hovsepian-Bearce, Y. (2016). The political ideology of Ayatollah Khamenei: Out of the mouth of the Supreme Leader of Iran. UCLA Center for Middle East Development. Routledge.

  • Irving, S. (2012). Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian liberation. Revolutionary Lives. Pluto Press.

  • Jankowski, J. P. (2001). Nasser’s Egypt, Arab nationalism, and the United Arab Republic. Lynne Rienner Publishers.

  • Juergensmeyer, M. (2000). Terror in the mind of God: The global rise of religious violence. Comparative Studies in Religion and Society. University of California Press.

  • Juergensmeyer, M. (2003). Terror in the mind of God: The global rise of religious violence. Comparative Studies in Religion and Society (3rd ed.). University of California Press.

  • Juergensmeyer, M. (2008). Global rebellion: Religious challenges to the secular state, from Christian militias to al Qaeda. University of California Press.

  • Juergensmeyer, M., Kitts, M., & Jerryson, M. K. (2013). The Oxford handbook of religion and violence. Oxford University Press.

  • Kaplan, J. (2000a). Beyond the mainstream: The emergence of religious pluralism in Finland, Estonia, and Russia. SKS.

  • Kaplan, J. (2000b). Encyclopedia of white power: A sourcebook on the radical racist right. AltaMira Press.

  • Kaplan, J. (2002). Millennial violence: Past, present and future. Frank Cass.

  • Kaplan, J. (2007). The fifth wave: The new tribalism? Terrorism and Political Violence, 19(4), 545–570.

  • Kaplan, J. (2008). Terrorism’s fifth wave: A theory, a conundrum and a dilemma. Perspectives on Terrorism, 2(2).

  • Kaplan, J. (2010). Terrorist groups and the new tribalism: Terrorism’s fifth wave. Routledge.

  • Kaplan, J. (2011). David C. Rapoport and the study of religiously motivated terrorism. In J. Rosenfeld (Ed.), Terrorism, identity and legitimacy: Four waves theory and political violence (pp. 66–84). Routledge.

  • Kaplan, J. (2016a). A strained criticism of wave theory. Terrorism & Political Violence, 28(2), 228–235.

  • Kaplan, J. (2016b). Radical religion and violence: Theory and case studies. Routledge.

  • Kaplan, J., & Costa, C. P. (2014). On tribalism, auxiliaries, affiliates, and autonomous cell terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence, 26(1), 13–44.

  • Kaplan, J., & Costa, C. P. (2015). The Islamic State and the new tribalism. Terrorism & Political Violence, 27(5), 926–969.

  • Khaled, L., & Hajjar, G. (1973). My people shall live: The autobiography of a revolutionary. Hodder and Stoughton.

  • Khalidi, R. (2006). The iron cage: The story of the Palestinian struggle for statehood. Beacon Press.

  • Khalidi, R. (2010). Palestinian identity: The construction of modern national consciousness. Columbia University Press.

  • Khomeini, R., & Algar, H. (2002). Islam and revolution: Writings and declarations. Kegan Paul.

  • Kissileff, B., & Lidji, E. S. (2020). Bound in the bond of life: Pittsburgh writers reflect on the Tree of Life tragedy. University of Pittsburgh Press.

  • Koerner, B. I. (2013). The skies belong to us: Love and terror in the golden age of hijacking. Crown Publishers.

  • Koppel, M. (1993). Peru’s Shining Path: Anatomy of a reactionary sect. Pathfinder.

  • Laqueur, W. (2004). Voices of terror: Manifestos, writings, and manuals of Al Qaeda, Hamas, and other terrorists from around the world and throughout the ages. Reed Press.

  • Law, R. (Ed.). (2015). The Routledge history of terrorism. Routledge.

  • Libertaire Group (Japan), Paul Avrich Collection (Library of Congress). (1979). A short history of the anarchist movement in Japan. Idea Publishing House.

  • Maddy-Weitzman, B. (2015). A century of Arab politics: From the Arab Revolt to the Arab Spring. Rowman & Littlefield.

  • Makowski, K. A., & Hadler, F. (2013). Approaches to Slavic unity: Austro-Slavism, Pan-Slavism, Neo-Slavism, and solidarity among the Slavs today [in English and German]. Instytut Historii Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza.Mareš, M. (2009). The extreme right in Eastern Europe and territorial issues. Středoevropské politické studie, 11(2–3), 82–106.

  • Marty, M. E., Appleby, R. S., & American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1991). Fundamentalisms observed. The Fundamentalism Project. University of Chicago Press.

  • Marty, M. E., Appleby, R. S., & American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1993a). Fundamentalisms and society: Reclaiming the sciences, the family, and education. The Fundamentalism Project. University of Chicago Press.

  • Marty, M. E., Appleby, R. S., & American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1993b). Fundamentalisms and the state: Remaking polities, economies, and militance. The Fundamentalism Project. University of Chicago Press.

  • Marty, M. E., Appleby, R. S., & American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1994). Accounting for fundamentalisms: The dynamic character of movements. The Fundamentalism Project. University of Chicago Press.

  • Marty, M. E., Appleby, R. S., & American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1995). Fundamentalisms comprehended. The Fundamentalism Project. University of Chicago Press.

  • McCants, W. F. (2015). The ISIS apocalypse: The history, strategy, and doomsday vision of the Islamic State. St. Martin’s Press.

  • Melzer, P. (2015). Death in the shape of a young girl: Women’s political violence in the Red Army faction. Gender and Political Violence Series. New York University Press.

  • Michael, G. (2006). The enemy of my enemy: The alarming convergence of militant Islam and the extreme right. University Press of Kansas.

  • Mitchell, R. P. (1993). The Society of the Muslim Brothers. Oxford University Press.

  • Miller, J. (1999). Greetings, America. My name is Osama bin Laden. Frontline.

  • Moorcraft, P. L. (2012). Total destruction of the Tamil Tigers: The rare victory of Sri Lanka’s long war. Pen & Sword Military.

  • Palmer, D. S. (1994). The Shining Path of Peru (2nd ed.). St. Martin’s Press.

  • Parker, T., & Sitter, N. (2016). The Four Horsem*n of terrorism—It’s not waves, it’s strains. Terrorism & Political Violence, 28(2), 197–216.

  • Passmore, L. (2011). Ulrike Meinhof and the Red Army Faction: Performing terrorism. Palgrave Macmillan.

  • Payne, L., Findley, T., & Craven, C. (1976). The life and death of the SLA. Ballantine Books.

  • Pearsall, R. B. (Ed.). (1974). Symbionese Liberation Army: Documents and communication. Rodopi.

  • Perica, V. (2002). Balkan idols: Religion and nationalism in Yugoslav states. Religion and Global Politics. Oxford University Press.

  • Pokalova, E. E. (2015). Chechnya’s terrorist network: The evolution of terrorism in Russia’s North Caucasus. Praeger Security International. Praeger.

  • Pokharel, K., & Beckett, P. (2012). Ayodhya, the battle for India’s soul. The Wall Street Journal.

  • Ra’anan, U., & Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. (1986). Hydra of carnage: The international linkages of terrorism and other low-intensity operations: The witnesses speak. Lexington Books.

  • Rajan, V. G. J. (2015). Al Qaeda’s global crisis: The Islamic State, Takfir, and the genocide of Muslims. Contemporary Terrorism Studies. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.

  • Ramazani, R. K. (1979). Security in the Persian Gulf. Foreign Affairs, 57(4), 821–835.

  • Ramet, S. P. (1994). Rocking the state: Rock music and politics in Eastern Europe and Russia. Westview.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1979). Moses, charisma, and covenant. The Western Political Science Quarterly, 32(2), 123–143.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1982). Terror and the Messiah: An ancient experience and some modern parallels. In D. C. Rapoport & Y. Alexander (Eds.), The morality of terrorism: Religious and secular justifications (pp. 13–42). Columbia University Press.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1984). Fear and trembling: Terrorism in three religious traditions. American Political Science Review, 78(3), 658–677.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1987). Why does messianism produce terror? In P. Wilkinson & A. M. Stewart (Eds.), Contemporary research on terrorism (pp. 72–88). Aberdeen University Press.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1988). Messianic sanctions for terror. Comparative Politics, 20, 195–213.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (1996). The importance of space in violent ethno-religious strife. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 2(2), 258–285.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2002). The four waves of rebel terror and September 11. Anthropoetics, 8(1).

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2004). The four waves of modern terrorism. In A. K. Cronin & J. M. Ludes (Eds.), Attacking terrorism: Elements of a grand strategy (pp. 46–73). Georgetown University Press.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2008a). Before the bombs there were the mobs: American experiences with terror. Terrorism and Political Violence, 20(2), 167–194.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2008b). Terrorism. In L. Kurtz (Ed.), Encyclopedia of violence, peace, and conflict (pp. 497–510). Academic Press.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2013). The four waves of modern terror: International dimensions and consequences. In J. M. Hanhimäki & B. Blumenau (Eds.), An international history of terrorism: Western and non-Western experiences (pp. 282–311). Routledge.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2016a). It is waves, not strains. Terrorism and Political Violence, 28(2), 217–224.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (2016b). Reflections on the third or new left wave: 17 years later. In A. M. Alvarez & E. R. Tristán (Eds.), Revolutionary violence and the new left. Routledge.

  • Rapoport, D. C. (forthcoming). The history and future of terrorism. Columbia University Press.

  • Rapoport, D. C., & the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. (1971). Assassination and terrorism. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

  • Rashid, A. (2000). Taliban: Militant Islam, oil, and fundamentalism in Central Asia. Yale University Press.

  • Reader, I. (2000). Religious violence in contemporary Japan: The case of Aum Shinrikyo. University of Hawai’i Press.

  • Romerstein, H. (1989). Soviet active measures and propaganda: “New thinking” and influence activities in the Gorbachev era. Mackenzie Institute for the Study of Terrorism, Revolution, and Propaganda.

  • Ronfeldt, D. (2007). Al-Qaeda and its affiliates: A global tribe waging segmental warfare. In D. A. Borer & J. Arquilla (Eds.), Information strategy and warfare (pp. 50–71). Routledge.

  • Rosenfeld, J. E. (2011). Terrorism, identity, and legitimacy: The four waves theory and political violence. Political Violence Series. Routledge,

  • Sageman, M. (2008). Leaderless Jihad: Terror networks in the twenty-first century. University of Pennsylvania Press.

  • Sanders, A. (2011). Inside the IRA: Dissident Republicans and the war for legitimacy. Edinburgh University Press.

  • Scalapino, R. A., & Yu, G. T. (1961). The Chinese anarchist movement. Center for Chinese Studies, Institute of International Studies, University of California.

  • Schlesinger, A. M. (1986). The cycles of American history. Houghton Mifflin.

  • Schmid, A. P. (2011). The Routledge handbook of terrorism research. Routledge.

  • Segal, H. (1988). Dear brothers: The West Bank Jewish underground. Beit Shamai Publications.

  • Sharīf, B. A. (2009). Arafat and the dream of Palestine: An insider’s account (1st ed.). Palgrave Macmillan.

  • Shultz, R. H., & Godson, R. (1984). Dezinformatsia: Active measures in Soviet strategy. Pergamon-Brassey’s.

  • Sjoberg, L., & Gentry, C. E. (2011). Women, gender, and terrorism. Studies in Security and International Affairs. University of Georgia Press.

  • Smith, J., & Moncourt, A. (2009). The Red Army Faction, a documentary history: Volume 1: Projectiles for the people. PM Press.

  • Sprinzak, E. (1999). Brother against brother: Violence and extremism in Israeli politics from Altalena to the Rabin assassination. Free Press.

  • Sterling, C. (1981). The terror network: The secret war of international terrorism. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.

  • Stern, J., & Berger, J. M. (2015). ISIS: The state of terror. HarperCollins.

  • Stern, P. A. (1995). Sendero Luminoso: An annotated bibliography of the Shining Path guerrilla movement, 1980–1993. SALALM Secretariat, General Library, University of New Mexico.

  • Strick van Linschoten, A., & Kuehn, F. (2012). An enemy we created: The myth of the Taliban-Al Qaeda merger in Afghanistan. Oxford University Press.

  • Strong, S. (1992). Shining Path: Terror and revolution in Peru (1st ed.). Times Books.

  • Terrill, R. (1999). Mao: A biography. Stanford University Press.

  • Townsend, C. (2016). Waves and strains. Terrorism & Political Violence, 28(2), 225–227.

  • Trofimov, Y. (2008). The siege of Mecca: The 1979 uprising at Islam’s holiest shrine. Anchor Books.

  • Vague, T. (1994). Televisionaries: The Red Army faction story 1963–1993 (Rev. ed.). AK Press.

  • Weinberg, L. (2012). The end of terrorism? Routledge.

  • Weinberg, L., & Eubank, W. (2010). An end to the fourth wave of terrorism? Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 33, 594–602.

  • Weiss, G. (2012). The cage: The fight for Sri Lanka and the last days of the Tamil Tigers. Bellevue Literary Press.

  • Wessinger, C. (2000). Millennialism, persecution, and violence: Historical cases. Syracuse University Press.

  • Whitlock, S. T. (2014). Boko Haram: The emerging Nigerian terrorist threat. Nova Publishers.

  • Yemelianova, G. M. (2010). Radical Islam in the former Soviet Union. Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series. Routledge.

  • Zablocki, B. D., & Robbins, T. (2001). Misunderstanding cults: Searching for objectivity in a controversial field. University of Toronto Press.

Waves of Political Terrorism (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Corie Satterfield

Last Updated:

Views: 6310

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Corie Satterfield

Birthday: 1992-08-19

Address: 850 Benjamin Bridge, Dickinsonchester, CO 68572-0542

Phone: +26813599986666

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Table tennis, Soapmaking, Flower arranging, amateur radio, Rock climbing, scrapbook, Horseback riding

Introduction: My name is Corie Satterfield, I am a fancy, perfect, spotless, quaint, fantastic, funny, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.