Description
To Deter and Punish examines why and how the United States and its Western European allies came to treat nonstate "terrorists" as a key threat to their security and interests. Drawing on a multinational array of sources, Silke Zoller traces Western state officials' attempts to control the meaning of and responses to terrorism from the first Palestinian hijacking in 1968 to Ronald Reagan's militarization of counterterrorism in the early 1980s. She details how Western states sought to criminalize border-crossing nonstate violence-and thus delegitimized offenders' political aspirations. U.S. and European officials pressured states around the world to join agreements requiring them to create and enforce criminal laws against alleged individual terrorists. Zoller underscores how recently decolonized states countered that only a more equitable global system capable of addressing political grievances would end the violence.
To Deter and Punish offers a new account of the emergence of modern counterterrorism that pinpoints its international dimensions-a story about diplomats and bureaucrats as well as national liberation militancy and the processes of decolonization.
About the Author
Silke Zoller is an assistant professor of history at Kennesaw State University.
Reviews
Silke Zoller's book is an empirically rich and diverse analysis of early international efforts against terrorism. The breadth and depth of this study will make it key reading for anybody interested in terrorism during this period and how states worked together (or not) to counter it. -- Bernhard Blumenau, author of The United Nations and Terrorism: Germany, Multilateralism, and Antiterrorism Efforts in the 1970s
Terrorism did not begin with 9/11. Just ask Archduke Ferdinand, Guy Fawkes, and the like. Our current conception, however, arose in the 1960s and 1970s, as Silke Zoller smartly and insightfully recounts in this new history of the international community's response to one of the defining international problems of their day, and of ours. -- Jeffrey A. Engel, author of When the World Seemed New: George H. W. Bush and the End of the Cold War
Zoller provides a well-researched account of the national and multinational efforts to counter the surge of international terrorism in the 'long 1970s.' Detailed and well-researched, To Deter and Punish brings together several elements of a complex history into a coherent narrative that connects to several strands in recent historiographical developments. -- Jussi Hanhimaki, author of The United Nations: A Very Short Introduction
Book Information
ISBN 9780231195478
Author Silke Zoller
Format Paperback
Page Count 360
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press