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Journal Article

Citation

Bowman Grieve L, Palasinski M, Shortland N. Safer Communities 2019; 18(3/4): 81-93.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/SC-08-2018-0023

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE The purpose of this paper is to explore the concept of vengeance as a terrorist motivator.

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH The paper takes a community psychological perspective to examine vengeance in a number of forms. First covering "blood vengeance", it then examines vigilantism and death squads as functional examples of vengeful entities, as well as the morality of vengeance and the impact of propaganda on vengeance as a terrorist motivator. Finally, both group processes and individual factors relating to the promotion and use of vengeance in terrorism are covered.

FINDINGS Vengeance can be conceptualised in a number of ways: as a predisposing factor to individual involvement, a factor that contributes to keeping the movement "bound" together (but which can also negatively affect the group's strategic logic), a factor in the escalation of violent activity through vigilantism, retribution and retaliation which can result in a perpetuation of a cycle of violence, and as a moral mandate that is ideologically rationalised and justified, with perceptions of righteousness and obligation inherent to it. Research limitations/implications The presented research is limited by the scarcely available data. Practical implications Efforts should be made to defuse vengeful motivations by tapping into collective identities of communities and incorporating multicultural values. Social implications Policy makers should be wary of scoring populist scores by ridiculing out-group/religious elements as that creates potential for vengeful terror attacks.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE The paper offers insights by renewing the neglected perspective of vengeance in terrorism research.


Language: en

Keywords

Terrorism; Vigilantism

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