The Historical Roots Of Political Violence: Revolutionary Terrorism In Affluent Countries

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Following the protest movements and radicalism of the late sixties, many affluent countries experienced lethal revolutionary terrorism. Groups like the Red Brigades in Italy and the Red Army Faction in Germany provoked political crises in their countries. Other affluent countries, however, did not experience this same kind of violence. This book offers a historical-comparative explanation of this cross-national variation, focusing on the development paths followed by countries during the interwar period. The countries that followed a non-liberal path (marked by anarchist terrorism, democratic breakdowns, civil wars, land inequality, non-liberal capitalism, and late industrialization) suffered lethal left-wing terrorism decades later. Terrorism is thus explained as a feature of the political and economic system. Drawing on several fields, including comparative politics, political economy, international relations, and historical sociology, this book offers novel hypotheses about the determinants of violent conflict.

Author(s): Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca
Series: Cambridge Studies In Comparative Politics
Edition: 1
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2019

Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF | Cover | TOC
Pages: 299
Tags: Terrorism: Developed Countries: History: 20th Century; Radicalism: Developed Countries: History: 20th Century; Political Violence: Developed Countries: History: 20th Century; Developed Countries: Economic Conditions: 20th Century

Cover
Half Title
Series Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Figures
Tables
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
1 | The Argument
2 | Revolutionary Terrorism and Its Ideological Roots
3 | The Major Cases of Revolutionary Terrorism
4 | Contemporary Effects and Background Conditions
5 | The Long-Term Determinants of Revolutionary Terrorism
6 | Historical Mechanisms
7 | Individualism, Modernization, and Violence
References
Index
Series page - Series page