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Bruce Hoffman

Auteur van Inside Terrorism

21+ Werken 563 Leden 4 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

Over de Auteur

Bruce Hoffman is a professor in Georgetown University's Walsh School of Foreign Service and the director of the Center for Security Studies and the Security Studies Program. He is also a senior fellow at the U.S. Military Academy's Combating Terrorism Center and a visiting professor of terrorism toon meer studies at St. Andrews University. Hoffman is the editor of the Columbia University Press series Columbia Studies in Terrorism and Irregular Warfare, coeditor of The Evolution of the Global Terrorist Threat: From 9/11 to Osama bin Laden's Death, and author of Anonymous Soldiers: The Struggle for Israel, 1917-1947. toon minder

Bevat de naam: Bruce Hoffman

Fotografie: Bruce Hoffman [credit: Georgetown University]

Werken van Bruce Hoffman

Inside Terrorism (1998) 397 exemplaren

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God, Guns, and Sedition by Bruce Hoffman and Jacob Ware is a very accessible look at the history of far-right terrorism with some difficult but very workable solutions to inhibit current and future extreme domestic terrorism no matter where on the political spectrum it comes from.

As a look back this gives the reader a better understanding that what is happening is not something that only just sprouted. This is valuable because too many of us present "solutions" that treat it as a "because of Trump" problem or a "reaction to Obama" problem. These two things are simply the more recent catalysts for far-right terrorism to come back into prominence. And while our current technology certainly contributes to making this a potent threat to democracy, and even just peace, social media is again just a more recent element of a long-simmering issue.

What I especially found appealing was the chapter that offered ideas on solving our current problems while laying the foundation to minimize the opportunities for future extremism to radicalize so many people to violence. I am often skeptical, both because of my support of free speech and because many proposed solutions don't seem workable, of solutions in the books I've read on the topic. Hoffman and Ware make suggestions that try to balance the very freedoms we want to keep at the core of our democracy while reigning in the blatant abuse of those rights and freedoms. They also present these ideas with enough detail to see how they would work while also admitting that coming up with specific policies and laws will take negotiation and debate. In other words, rather than present quick fixes that aren't practical they present a framework (short-, mid-, and long-range policies) within which we must get our legislators (as well as private and nonprofit groups) begin to act.

I would recommend this to anyone, no matter where you are on the political spectrum (unless, of course, you prefer authoritarianism to democracy), who wants to not only maintain but improve our democracy in the United States. The writing, while detailed and fully documented, is accessible and actually very engaging (considering the topic).

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley.
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pomo58 | Oct 5, 2023 |
Terror today is endless. However in the period of the 1930s and 1940s, a small number of committed individuals sought to achieve a specific goal: an independent Israel and an end to British rule under its League of Nations mandate. Actual terrorists were but a fraction of the total Jewish population of Mandate Palestine but they caused so much of a threat that by the mid-1940s the UK had stationed 100,000 troops in the nation, hid behind barbed wire and concrete fortifications, and created a Guantanamo-style prison in Kenya and Eritrea where suspected and actual terrorists could be held indefinitely without trial or appeal. At the end of WWII, for a period of time, Britain sought to maintain its pre-war hegemony and empire. But it was too exhausted fiscally and politically and the aim of using Palestine as a base by which India could be safer was a pipe dream--given the Indian thrust for independence. In the U.S., many people sympathized with the Israeli terrorists, and full-page fundraising letters (published in leading newspapers) were written by such famous individuals as Ben Hecht. Truman sought to push the British toward partition as well by supporting the immediate entry to Israel of 100,000 Holocaust survivors caught in European displaced persons camps. Britain, like the U.S. in Vietnam, was a pitiful helpless giant and here are the cables, correspondence, and insights that powered a successful terror campaign and the failed attempts to stop it. Probably a definitive work.… (meer)
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neddludd | Jun 26, 2015 |
"...The Hoffman is a terrific introduction to the issue of terrorism. It is a foundational book for anyone who wants to understand terrorism and the War on Terror.

Hoffman represents one side in a continuous debate about al Qaeda. He argues that al Qaeda is a coherent terrorist group, a group with politics and an ideology, willing to commit acts of terror to achieve its goals. Hoffman would say that it is al Qaeda and groups like it that present the most serious threat to the United States today..." (reviewed by Mary Habeck in FiveBooks).


The full interview is available here: http://fivebooks.com/interviews/mary-habeck-on-terrorism
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FiveBooks | 1 andere bespreking | May 24, 2010 |

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