Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992

This thesis examines Hezbollah’s transition from their violent forms of political expression after their founding in 1984, to their involvement in the Lebanese electoral system in 1992. Drawing on the instrumental and organizational approaches for studying group behavior, this thesis examines the ex...

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Other Authors: Bell, Colleen
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2015-11-2443
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spelling ndltd-USASK-oai-ecommons.usask.ca-10388-ETD-2015-11-24432016-03-24T05:12:22ZDirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992Terrorisminternational EthicsHezbollahpolitical violenceThis thesis examines Hezbollah’s transition from their violent forms of political expression after their founding in 1984, to their involvement in the Lebanese electoral system in 1992. Drawing on the instrumental and organizational approaches for studying group behavior, this thesis examines the external instrumental factors and internal organizational factors that contributed to the political evolution of Hezbollah from an organization focused primarily on violent forms of political expression to an organization that primarily uses the parliamentary process. Examining Hezbollah’s transition and using it as a point of reference, the thesis exposes weaknesses of conventional International Relations analytical approaches to studying terrorist organizations and provides a more objective approach to studying political violence. It argues that the pejorative nature of the term terrorism, combined with problems developing a consensus on defining terrorism, limit the term’s usefulness for academics attempting to objectively examine political violence.Bell, Colleen2016-03-23T12:00:19Z2016-03-23T12:00:19Z2015-112016-03-22November 2015textthesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2015-11-2443eng
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Terrorism
international Ethics
Hezbollah
political violence
spellingShingle Terrorism
international Ethics
Hezbollah
political violence
Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
description This thesis examines Hezbollah’s transition from their violent forms of political expression after their founding in 1984, to their involvement in the Lebanese electoral system in 1992. Drawing on the instrumental and organizational approaches for studying group behavior, this thesis examines the external instrumental factors and internal organizational factors that contributed to the political evolution of Hezbollah from an organization focused primarily on violent forms of political expression to an organization that primarily uses the parliamentary process. Examining Hezbollah’s transition and using it as a point of reference, the thesis exposes weaknesses of conventional International Relations analytical approaches to studying terrorist organizations and provides a more objective approach to studying political violence. It argues that the pejorative nature of the term terrorism, combined with problems developing a consensus on defining terrorism, limit the term’s usefulness for academics attempting to objectively examine political violence.
author2 Bell, Colleen
author_facet Bell, Colleen
title Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
title_short Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
title_full Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
title_fullStr Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
title_full_unstemmed Dirty Bombs to Clean Water: Hezbollah's Political Transition From 1984 - 1992
title_sort dirty bombs to clean water: hezbollah's political transition from 1984 - 1992
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2015-11-2443
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