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Has terrorism lost the power to shock and appal? Have liberal
democracies learned to tolerate terrorism? Using case studies of
governments' and societies' responses to terrorism, this book,
first published in 1991, shows how attitudes towards terrorism have
developed. Five western countries with differing political
structures and histories are studied: Belgium, the Federal Republic
of Germany, Israel, Italy and Spain. The analysis investigates the
roles of social, political, legal, professional and religious
institutions and movements in formulating the approved attitude
towards terrorism that governs political bodies as well as society
at large. This book will be of interest to students of politics and
sociology.
This insightful text examines the widely varying attitudes to
terrorist attack in Western government and society. The focal point
of the book is the ideological gap between the moral reaction to
terrorism and the military and political response that follows.
Rather than there being a predictable response, a spectrum of
possible outcomes emerges. Using this variety of reactions from
support for terrorist aims through to outright condemnation, a
middle ground may be established between individual rights and
security for the many.
With the rise of international acts of terrorism there has been a
commensurate rise in the level of international cooperation in the
suppression of terrorism. This book, originally published in 1985,
is a detailed and authoritative study of the background to this
cooperation, the ways in which it has developed and the obstacles
to its proper implementation. Particular emphasis is placed on a s
tudy of the European experience of international cooperation, the
Council of Europe Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism being
used as a case study.
Has terrorism lost the power to shock and appal? Have liberal
democracies learned to tolerate terrorism? Using case studies of
governments' and societies' responses to terrorism, this book,
first published in 1991, shows how attitudes towards terrorism have
developed. Five western countries with differing political
structures and histories are studied: Belgium, the Federal Republic
of Germany, Israel, Italy and Spain. The analysis investigates the
roles of social, political, legal, professional and religious
institutions and movements in formulating the approved attitude
towards terrorism that governs political bodies as well as society
at large. This book will be of interest to students of politics and
sociology.
With the rise of international acts of terrorism there has been a
commensurate rise in the level of international cooperation in the
suppression of terrorism. This book, originally published in 1985,
is a detailed and authoritative study of the background to this
cooperation, the ways in which it has developed and the obstacles
to its proper implementation. Particular emphasis is placed on a
study of the European experience of international cooperation, the
Council of Europe Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism being
used as a case study.
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