NCJ Number
99426
Journal
Police Journal Volume: 58 Issue: 3 Dated: (July 1985) Pages: 195-202
Date Published
1985
Length
8 pages
Annotation
After a consideration of clinical conceptualizations of terrorist behavior, this article presents an analysis of terrorist motivation and goals that provides a more utilitarian approach to understanding such behavior.
Abstract
Much of what has been written on terrorist behavior seeks to explain it in terms of abnormality and mental illness. Such an approach presents problems because it subsumes deviance within a medical rather than a social or psychological model. A more useful conceptualization is to view terrorism as being at the extreme continuum of behavior. Diverse explanations of the motivations of terrorist actions have been offered, including group cohesion, alienation, breakdown in communications, publicity-seeking, frustration-aggression, financial gain, and excitement. Whatever the motivations, its consequences have utility, immediacy of effect, and are rewarding to the actor. To view terrorism in terms similar to those in which other criminal behaviors can be seen provides options for more effective remedial action. Such a conceptualization focuses more on the environmental and behavioral context within which the terrorist acts and less on personal characteristics. Included are 20 references.