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Profiling terror: gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism

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Profiling terror: gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism. / Gentry, Caron Eileen; Sjoberg, Laura.
In: Austrian Journal of Political Science, Vol. 37, No. 2, 01.01.2008, p. 181-196.

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Gentry CE, Sjoberg L. Profiling terror: gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism. Austrian Journal of Political Science. 2008 Jan 1;37(2):181-196. doi: 10.15203/ozp.716.vol37iss2

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Gentry, Caron Eileen ; Sjoberg, Laura. / Profiling terror : gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism. In: Austrian Journal of Political Science. 2008 ; Vol. 37, No. 2. pp. 181-196.

Bibtex

@article{8b8a3991c27842ebb4d74039a38d7f62,
title = "Profiling terror: gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism",
abstract = "Robert Pape's well-received book, Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (2005), presents what appears to be a gender-neutral study of both male and female suicide terrorists. Pape's main argument is that suicide terrorism is a strategic and rational terror campaign against democracies. While the study argues that male and female suicide terrorists are rational individuals, it depicts women as motivated by emotion. Thus, this article argues that gender-neutral work is rarely gender-neutral and such studies fail to recognize the social and political impact of gender. Furthermore, we argue that the rational choice model presented by Pape furthers the gender divide by emphasizing values associated with masculinity over values associated with femininity. As an alternative, we propose three propositions to change the study of suicide terrorism to include both political and emotional motivations. We propose that gendered presentations of female suicide bombers reify stereotypical images of gender and of suicide bombers, that silence about the complexity of suicide bombers' motivations does not erase the many variables that go into martyrs' decisions, and that adding emotion to the study of suicide bombing counterbalances the narrowness of the {"}strategic actor{"} model. The essay concludes with evidence from the study of the Chechen {"}black widows{"} that demonstrates the explanatory value of these propositions.",
author = "Gentry, {Caron Eileen} and Laura Sjoberg",
year = "2008",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.15203/ozp.716.vol37iss2",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "181--196",
journal = "Austrian Journal of Political Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Profiling terror

T2 - gender, strategic logic, and emotion in the study of suicide terrorism

AU - Gentry, Caron Eileen

AU - Sjoberg, Laura

PY - 2008/1/1

Y1 - 2008/1/1

N2 - Robert Pape's well-received book, Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (2005), presents what appears to be a gender-neutral study of both male and female suicide terrorists. Pape's main argument is that suicide terrorism is a strategic and rational terror campaign against democracies. While the study argues that male and female suicide terrorists are rational individuals, it depicts women as motivated by emotion. Thus, this article argues that gender-neutral work is rarely gender-neutral and such studies fail to recognize the social and political impact of gender. Furthermore, we argue that the rational choice model presented by Pape furthers the gender divide by emphasizing values associated with masculinity over values associated with femininity. As an alternative, we propose three propositions to change the study of suicide terrorism to include both political and emotional motivations. We propose that gendered presentations of female suicide bombers reify stereotypical images of gender and of suicide bombers, that silence about the complexity of suicide bombers' motivations does not erase the many variables that go into martyrs' decisions, and that adding emotion to the study of suicide bombing counterbalances the narrowness of the "strategic actor" model. The essay concludes with evidence from the study of the Chechen "black widows" that demonstrates the explanatory value of these propositions.

AB - Robert Pape's well-received book, Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (2005), presents what appears to be a gender-neutral study of both male and female suicide terrorists. Pape's main argument is that suicide terrorism is a strategic and rational terror campaign against democracies. While the study argues that male and female suicide terrorists are rational individuals, it depicts women as motivated by emotion. Thus, this article argues that gender-neutral work is rarely gender-neutral and such studies fail to recognize the social and political impact of gender. Furthermore, we argue that the rational choice model presented by Pape furthers the gender divide by emphasizing values associated with masculinity over values associated with femininity. As an alternative, we propose three propositions to change the study of suicide terrorism to include both political and emotional motivations. We propose that gendered presentations of female suicide bombers reify stereotypical images of gender and of suicide bombers, that silence about the complexity of suicide bombers' motivations does not erase the many variables that go into martyrs' decisions, and that adding emotion to the study of suicide bombing counterbalances the narrowness of the "strategic actor" model. The essay concludes with evidence from the study of the Chechen "black widows" that demonstrates the explanatory value of these propositions.

UR - https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/profiling-terror(03235e00-b5ef-4776-a9d3-a1f49e8bb6d6).html

U2 - 10.15203/ozp.716.vol37iss2

DO - 10.15203/ozp.716.vol37iss2

M3 - Journal article

VL - 37

SP - 181

EP - 196

JO - Austrian Journal of Political Science

JF - Austrian Journal of Political Science

IS - 2

ER -