Clandestine political violence

Bibliographic Information

Clandestine political violence

Donatella Della Porta

(Cambridge studies in contentious politics)

Cambridge University Press, 2013

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 297-319

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Clandestine Political Violence compares four types of clandestine political violence: left-wing (in Italy and Germany), right-wing (in Italy), ethnonationalist (in Spain) and religious fundamentalist (in Islamist clandestine organizations). Oriented toward theory building, Della Porta develops her own definition of clandestine political violence. Building on the most recent developments in social movement studies, Della Porta proposes an original interpretative model. Using a unique research design, she singles out some common causal mechanisms at the onset, during the persistence and at the demise of clandestine political violence. The development of the phenomenon is located within the interactions among social movements, countermovements and the state. She pays particular attention to the ways different actors cognitively construct the reality they act upon. Based on original empirical research as well as existing research in many languages, this book is rich in empirical evidence on some of the most crucial cases of clandestine political violence.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Political violence and social movements: an introduction
  • 2. Escalating policing
  • 3. Competitive escalation during protest cycles
  • 4. The activation of militant networks
  • 5. Organizational compartmentalization
  • 6. Action militarization
  • 7. Ideological encapsulation
  • 8. Militant enclosure
  • 9. Leaving clandestinity? Reversing mechanisms of engagement
  • 10. Clandestine political violence: some conclusions.

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