TY - JOUR
PY - 2015//
TI - Suicide attacks and the social structure of sacrifice
JO - Sociology of crime, law and deviance
A1 - Manning, J.
SP - 151
EP - 171
VL - 20
IS -
N2 - PURPOSE-In this chapter, I apply theories of conflict and social control derived from the work of Donald Black to explain when suicide attacks will occur and who will carry them out.
METHODology/approach-Drawing on the published literature on suicide, suicide terrorism, and social control, I present a structural analysis of suicide attacks that specifies which configurations of social space and social time are most likely to produce them.
FINDINGS-I propose that suicide attacks can be explained by structural patterns such as social distance, status inferiority, organization, and large movements of social time. Furthermore, sacrifice is greater among those who are socially marginal individuals whose locations are otherwise conducive to both partisanship and self-destruction.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE-I highlight structural similarities between suicide attacks and other forms of violence, social control, and suicide, thus contributing to the systemization of structural theories of human behavior and suggesting avenues for further study. Copyright © 2015 by Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1521-6136 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/S1521-613620150000020009 ID - ref1 ER -