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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tricia Bacon , Elizabeth GrimmPublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press ISBN: 9780231192248ISBN 10: 023119224 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 13 September 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction 1. Literature Review and Research Design 2. Founders: Who Is a Founder, What Does He Do, and Who Comes Next? 3. The Second Ku Klux Klan: From Founder to Fixer 4. Egyptian Islamic Jihad: From Founder to Figureheads, to Fixer, to Visionary 5. Al-Qaida in Iraq/the Islamic State of Iraq: From Founder to Signalers 6. Al-Shabaab: From Founder to Fixer, to Figurehead 7. Pathways and Possibilities: Lessons Learned from the Mini–Case Studies Conclusion Appendix A. Religious Terrorist Groups Appendix B. Summary of Mini–Case Study Data Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsMeticulous in its research, Terror in Transition delivers an abundance of new insight into the impact of succession on terrorist entities, delivering on its objective to better analyze the implications of decapitation. Focusing on the essence of a leader's how and why and its relationship to succession, Terror in Transition also provides CT practitioners with a framework to assess other options for influencing the direction of terrorist entities. -- Gina M. Bennett, author of <i>National Security Mom: Why Going Soft Will Make America Strong</i> Terror in Transition is the definitive study of how terrorist groups manage (or fail to manage) leadership transitions. Bacon and Grimm's analysis helps us understand how and why certain terrorist groups thrive while some split or otherwise cannot manage the transition. Their many insights can help counterterrorist officials exploit transition tensions to weaken extremist groups. -- Daniel Byman, author of <i>Spreading Hate: The Global Rise of White Supremacist Terrorism</i> An original, systematic, detailed, and rigorous analysis of terrorist leadership and succession. A very compelling study of a major topic. -- Richard English, author of <i>Does Terrorism Work?: A History</i> Bacon and Grimm's Terror In Transition is a timely and rigorous case-study analysis that helps us understand the often misunderstood world of leadership succession in religious terrorist groups. Their typology provides a critical means of how we should assess founders and successors during leadership transitions. A must-read for both academics and policymakers. -- Bryan C. Price, author of <i>Targeting Top Terrorists: Understanding Leadership Removal in Counterterrorism Strategy</i> An original, systematic, detailed, and rigorous analysis of terrorist leadership and succession. A very compelling study of a major topic. -- Richard English, author of <i>Does Terrorism Work?: A History</i> Meticulous in its research, Terror in Transition delivers an abundance of new insight into the impact of succession on terrorist entities, delivering on its objective to better analyze the implications of decapitation. Focusing on the essence of a leader's how and why and its relationship to succession, Terror in Transition also provides CT practitioners with a framework to assess other options for influencing the direction of terrorist entities. -- Gina M. Bennett, author of <i>National Security Mom: Why Going Soft Will Make America Strong</i> Terror in Transition is the definitive study of how terrorist groups manage (or fail to manage) leadership transitions. Bacon and Grimm's analysis helps us understand how and why certain terrorist groups thrive while some split or otherwise cannot manage the transition. Their many insights can help counterterrorist officials exploit transition tensions to weaken extremist groups. -- Daniel Byman, author of <i>Spreading Hate: The Global Rise of White Supremacist Terrorism</i> An original, systematic, detailed, and rigorous analysis of terrorist leadership and succession. A very compelling study of a major topic. -- Richard English, author of <i>Does Terrorism Work?: A History</i> Meticulous in its research, Terror in Transition delivers an abundance of new insight into the impact of succession on terrorist entities, delivering on its objective to better analyze the implications of decapitation. Focusing on the essence of a leader's how and why and its relationship to succession, Terror in Transition also provides CT practitioners with a framework to assess other options for influencing the direction of terrorist entities. -- Gina M. Bennett, author of <i>National Security Mom: Why Going Soft Will Make America Strong</i> Bacon and Grimm have written an outstanding book, essential reading for anyone seeking to understand terrorist organizations, or leadership of violent groups in general. -- Brian Phillips * Small War Journals * An original, systematic, detailed, and rigorous analysis of terrorist leadership and succession. A very compelling study of a major topic. -- Richard English, author of <i>Does Terrorism Work?: A History</i> Terror in Transition is the definitive study of how terrorist groups manage (or fail to manage) leadership transitions. Bacon and Grimm's analysis helps us understand how and why certain terrorist groups thrive while some split or otherwise cannot manage the transition. Their many insights can help counterterrorist officials exploit transition tensions to weaken extremist groups. -- Daniel Byman, author of <i>Spreading Hate: The Global Rise of White Supremacist Terrorism</i> Author InformationTricia L. Bacon is an associate professor in the School of Public Affairs at American University and director of the Policy Anti-Terrorism Hub. She is the author of Why Terrorist Groups Form International Alliances (2018). She previously spent ten years working on counterterrorism at the U.S. Department of State. Elizabeth Grimm is an associate professor of teaching in the Security Studies Program at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. She is the author of How the Gloves Came Off: Lawyers, Policy Makers, and Norms in the Debate on Torture (2017). She has also worked in the defense and security sectors of the U.S. government. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |