Abstract
Women have had a long history of participating in terrorist activity. This history extends from the earliest modern terrorist
group, from the nineteenth century Russian People’s Will to the current wave of suicide bombings carried out by the Chechen
Black Widows and the Tamil Tiger’s Birds of Paradise. This article traces the history of female involvement in modern terrorism
and then goes on to make a number of generalizations about this experience. Among other things, the writers point out that
women have played strong leadership roles in left-wing, revolutionary bands, while these roles have been far fewer with right-wing
and racist aggregations. Women have tended to be late-comers to contemporary, religiously-inspired terrorism: Muslim religious
authorities first had to endorse their participation.
group, from the nineteenth century Russian People’s Will to the current wave of suicide bombings carried out by the Chechen
Black Widows and the Tamil Tiger’s Birds of Paradise. This article traces the history of female involvement in modern terrorism
and then goes on to make a number of generalizations about this experience. Among other things, the writers point out that
women have played strong leadership roles in left-wing, revolutionary bands, while these roles have been far fewer with right-wing
and racist aggregations. Women have tended to be late-comers to contemporary, religiously-inspired terrorism: Muslim religious
authorities first had to endorse their participation.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-28
- DOI 10.1007/s12147-011-9101-8
- Authors
- Leonard Weinberg, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA
- William Eubank, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA
- Journal Gender Issues
- Online ISSN 1936-4717
- Print ISSN 1098-092X