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Recruitment of Italian Political Terrorists (From Multidimensional Terrorism, P 81-94, 1987, Martin Slann and Bernard Schechterman, eds. -- See NCJ-109023)

NCJ Number
109032
Author(s)
L Weinberg; W L Eubank
Date Published
1987
Length
14 pages
Annotation
In Italy, the protracted national episodes of political terrorism between 1970 and 1984 showed a shift from dominance by neo-Fascist groups to dominance by revolutionary communist groups.
Abstract
To examine differences in the careers of those involved in terrorist activities over this period, biographical information was examined for 2,512 individuals who were arrested or for whom warrants were issued for committing, planning, or supporting terrorism. Comparison of data for those involved in terrorism before and after 1977 indicates that early terrorists were overwhelmingly male, came from upper status positions and business (as opposed to labor) backgrounds, were less likely to be married, had preterrorist membership in a conventional political party, and were more likely to be in leadership than supportive positions inside terrorist organizations. An analysis of changes in the characteristics of right- and left-wing participants over time suggests that within both groups, terrorism spread through processes of both expansion (spread to progressively wider segments of the population) and diffusion (greater penetration within the same population segment). 6 tables and 8 notes.

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