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Journal Article

Citation

Laster K, Erez E. Women Crim. Justice 2015; 25(1-2): 83-99.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/08974454.2015.1023884

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

New Terrorism is increasingly deploying women in the field as combatants. Female suicide bombers have proven to be highly effective, precisely because of the persistence of gender stereotypes in target societies. Women terrorists convey a powerful message of political seriousness, heighten the sense of intimidation and threat, and attract greater mass media attention--all key strategic objectives of New Terrorism. Gender stereotypes are also at work in explanations for women's recourse to terrorist activism. Such stereotypes simplify complex motivations and either overvalue or undervalue women's agency. The net result of this stereotyping is that women end up worse off individually and collectively, domestically and internationally. The lives of women in geopolitical hotspots have become more precarious, and the valorization of women terrorists undermines the quest for women's emancipation in fundamentalist cultures. In Western democracies, paternalistic outrage at women's subordination under fundamentalist regimes may have initially served as a dubious justification for military and other interventions, but the involvement of women in terrorist activism now risks reinforcing an even more dangerous "clash of civilizations" thinking. One effect is to undermine the demands for greater gender equality in Western democracies as well as indirectly support the war on women political agenda domestically. © 2015, Copyright © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.


Language: en

Keywords

terrorism; stereotypes; war on women

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