CRMJ 521 WEEK 5
Chapter 9
Emerging Terrorist Environments
Gender-Selective Political Violence and Criminal Dissident Terrorism
Gender-Selective Victims of Terrorist Violence
· Gender-selective political violence is the discriminate use of force purposely directed against males or females of a particular group.
· It is the product of communal discord.
· The degree of violence varies.
Gender-Selective Victims of Terrorist Violence
· Gender-Selective Terrorism Against Men
· During conflict and unrest.
· Elimination of potential fighters.
· Cases:
· Armenian genocide.
· German war against the Soviets.
· Anfal campaign.
· Rwandan genocide.
· ISIS offensive.
· Bosnia-Herzegovina
· Cultural Repression and Violence
· Women as second-class citizens.
· Case: Status of women in Saudi Arabia
· Case: Repression under the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
· Violent cultural repression of women.
· Case: Honor killings.
· Case: Female infanticide.
· Case: Female genital mutilation (FGM).
· Case: “Cleansing” sexual relations.
· Terrorism Against Women
· State terrorism against women.
· Campaigns of conquest during wartime.
· Perceived threat from an indigenous ethnic group.
· Case: Rape of Nanking and “comfort women.”
· Case: The Bangladesh Liberation War
· Dissident terrorism against women.
· By insurgents or paramilitaries.
· Case: Ethnic cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
· Case: Sierra Leone during the 1990s.
· Case: The Janjaweed in Sudan
· Gender-Selective Victims of Terrorist Violence (continued)
· Responding to Gender-Selective Terrorism
· No collective response until late 20th century.
· 1998 decision by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
· 2001 “Foca” decision by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.
Criminal Dissident Terrorism
· The Criminal and Political Terrorism Nexus
· Transnational organized crime and criminal cartels.
· Common characteristics:
· Secretive.
· Antisocial.
· Underground.
· Smuggling and “special-order” goods.
· Selling to the highest bidder.
· Threat scenario: Weapons of mass destruction.
· Traditional Criminal Enterprises
· Motivated by sheer profit.
· Politically passive when left alone.
· Politically violent when challenged by governments.
· Cases:
· Chinese Triads.
· Japanese Yakuza.
· American La Cosa Nostra.
· Columbian and Mexican drug cartels.
· Russian Mafia.
· Italian Mafia.
· Southeast Asian drug lords.
· The Logic of Narco-Terrorism
· “The use of drug trafficking to advance the objectives of certain governments and terrorist organizations.”
· Drug-related violence.
· Latin American narcotrafficantes.
Regional Cases of Criminal Terrorism
· Latin America
· Arrellano-Felix Group
· Los Zetas
· Columbia, FARC, and AUC
· Peru’s Shining Path
· Regional Cases of Criminal Terrorism
· Asia
· Golden Crescent
· Golden Triangle
Cases:
· Afghanistan
· ISIS
· Tamil Tigers
· The Phillipines
· Europe
· Italian and Russian organized crime.
· The “Balkan Route.”