Gendering Terrorism: Women, Gender, Terrorism and Suicide Bombers
Tunde Agara
Abstract
Although terrorism is as old as humanity, recent events around the globe have however shown that the greatest
threat to the future of the world today is not nuclear weapons, military coups or any pandemic or endemic
diseases but religion and religious differences which have spurned a form of terrorism that seem to surpass two of
the greatest tragedies of our modern history; the two World Wars. However, the involvement of women in
terrorism and terrorists’ organisations has been obfuscated by media and policy makers, making it look as if it is
a recent phenomenon when history actually shows that women involvement had been from inception. While this
has become problematic and has generated questions about the frequency, importance, uniqueness and meaning
of women’s terrorist activities, it is becoming very clear that the relationship between women, gender and
terrorism cannot be ignored any longer. Questions about the motivations of the women who become active in
these organizations have been raised - do they participate on strictly religious, political or personal reasons and
which of these are more important as guiding and motivating their decisions? Is the increased in targeted women
recruitment through abduction, compulsion or willingness an important variable in understanding this
phenomenon? Could there be separate or different explanations for women’s involvement in terrorism as opposed
to men’s? What is therefore the nexus or dimensions of relationship between women, gender and terrorism? These
constitute the polemics which this paper seeks to interrogate.
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