
Bruce Bongar (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
01 June 2015
Published in print:
01 September 2006
Online ISBN:
9780190242275
Print ISBN:
9780195172492
Contents
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Social Influence Campaigns Social Influence Campaigns
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A Process View of Social Influence A Process View of Social Influence
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Terrorism as Social Influence Terrorism as Social Influence
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The Means of Communication: Bullets, Not Ballots The Means of Communication: Bullets, Not Ballots
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The Target Audiences: At Whom Is Terrorism Aimed? The Target Audiences: At Whom Is Terrorism Aimed?
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Historical Terrorism Historical Terrorism
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Terrorism From Antiquity to World War II Terrorism From Antiquity to World War II
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Proxy, Anticolonial, and International Terrorism: World War II to 1980 Proxy, Anticolonial, and International Terrorism: World War II to 1980
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The Rise of Religious Terror: 1980 to the Present The Rise of Religious Terror: 1980 to the Present
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Conclusion: The ̋ Persuasiveness ̋ of Terrorist Acts Conclusion: The ̋ Persuasiveness ̋ of Terrorist Acts
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Chapter
7 What Is Terrorism? Key Elements and History
Get access
Pages
87–100
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Published:September 2006
Cite
Gerwehr, Scott, and Kirk Hubbard, 'What Is Terrorism? Key Elements and History', in Bruce Bongar, and others (eds), Psychology of Terrorism (New York , 2006; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 June 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780195172492.003.0007, accessed 4 May 2025.
Abstract
Chapter 7 explores key elements of terrorism, and its history. It discusses social influence campaigns, terrorism as social influence, and the audiences at which terrorism is aimed, along with historical terrorism during World War II, Anticolonial terrorism, and religious terrorism
Keywords:
psychology of terrorism, social influence, historical terrorism, anticolonial terrorism, religious terrorism, terrorism
Subject
Clinical Psychology
Collection:
Oxford Clinical Psychology
© Oxford University Press
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