Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Lone wolf terrorism through a gendered lens : men turning violent or violent men behaving violently? Jude McCulloch, Sandra Walklate, JaneMaree Maher, Kate Fitz‑Gibbon and Jasmine McGowan

By: McCulloch, Jude.
Contributor(s): Walklate, Sandra | Maher, JaneMaree | Fitz-Gibbon, Kate | McGowan, Jasmine.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Critical Criminology.Publisher: Springer, 2019Subject(s): ABUSIVE MEN | GENDER | MASCULINITY | TERRORISM | VIOLENCE | VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN | INTERNATIONALOnline resources: DOI: 10.1007/s10612-019-09457-5 | Read The Conversation article In: Critical Criminology, 2019, 27: 437–450Summary: Lone wolf terrorists, who use bombs, firearms, knives, vehicles, biological weapons, or other means to kill and injure, sometimes inflicting mass casualties, are of increasing concern to governments, police, and security forces in Western countries around the globe. This article seeks to develop a more multi-dimensional framework for understanding these actors and the attacks they perpetrate by bringing the under-examined aspect of gender to the fore. The article contributes to the body of literature on lone wolf terrorism by centering gender as a means of analyzing this phenomenon. In particular, it looks to the current criminological scholarship on lone wolf terrorism, highlighting the lack of a developed gendered analysis. The article challenges misrepresentations of male violence against women in response to and in representations of lone wolf terrorists. It argues that the proliferation of these misunderstandings in policy, practice, and scholarship undermines efforts to understand and combat effectively lone wolf terrorism. (Authors' abstract). The authors were awarded Best Journal Article of the Year 2020 by the American Society of Criminology Division on Critical Criminology and Social Justice (DCCSJ) for this article. Record #6935
No physical items for this record

Critical Criminology, 2019, 27: 437–450

Lone wolf terrorists, who use bombs, firearms, knives, vehicles, biological weapons, or other means to kill and injure, sometimes inflicting mass casualties, are of increasing concern to governments, police, and security forces in Western countries around the globe. This article seeks to develop a more multi-dimensional framework for understanding these actors and the attacks they perpetrate by bringing the under-examined aspect of gender to the fore. The article contributes to the body of literature on lone wolf terrorism by centering gender as a means of analyzing this phenomenon. In particular, it looks to the current criminological scholarship on lone wolf terrorism, highlighting the lack of a developed gendered analysis. The article challenges misrepresentations of male violence against women in response to and in representations of lone wolf terrorists. It argues that the proliferation of these misunderstandings in policy, practice, and scholarship undermines efforts to understand and combat effectively lone wolf terrorism. (Authors' abstract). The authors were awarded Best Journal Article of the Year 2020 by the American Society of Criminology Division on Critical Criminology and Social Justice (DCCSJ) for this article. Record #6935