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Contents
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- 1. A Model of the Turn to Political Violence 1
- 2. The French Revolution and the Emergence of Modern Political Violence 48
- 3. Political Violence from the Restoration to the Paris Commune 109
- 4. The Professionalization of Terroristic Violence in Russia 152
- 5. Anarchism and the Expansion of Political Violence 224
- 6. The Specialized Terrorist Organization: The PSR Combat Unit 1902–1908 263
- 7. Banditry, the End of a World, and Indiscriminate Political Violence 316
- 8. Policy Implications 361
- Appendix. Testing the Social Identity Perspective Model of the Turn to Political Violence 377
- Notes 385
- Bibliography 437
- Index 469
- Acknowledgments 495
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- 1. A Model of the Turn to Political Violence 1
- 2. The French Revolution and the Emergence of Modern Political Violence 48
- 3. Political Violence from the Restoration to the Paris Commune 109
- 4. The Professionalization of Terroristic Violence in Russia 152
- 5. Anarchism and the Expansion of Political Violence 224
- 6. The Specialized Terrorist Organization: The PSR Combat Unit 1902–1908 263
- 7. Banditry, the End of a World, and Indiscriminate Political Violence 316
- 8. Policy Implications 361
- Appendix. Testing the Social Identity Perspective Model of the Turn to Political Violence 377
- Notes 385
- Bibliography 437
- Index 469
- Acknowledgments 495