All Stories

  1. He's a Fed
  2. We Protect Us: Cyber Persistent Digital Antifascism and Dual Use Knowledge
  3. Feral fascists and deep green guerrillas: infrastructural attack and accelerationist terror
  4. Prosecuting Political Violence
  5. Introducing the Prosecution Project 2017–2020
  6. Afterword
  7. Now That Was A Riot!: Social Control in Felonious Times
  8. Cells, CommuniquÉs and Monikers
  9. Introduction: studying political violence while indicted – against objectivity and detachment
  10. The Routledge History of World Peace Since 1750
  11. Introduction
  12. Structural Conflict, Systemic Violence, and Peace: A Guided Reading
  13. Leftist Political Violence
  14. Index
  15. Abbreviations
  16. Insurrection as warfare, terrorism, and revolutionary design
  17. Insurrection as anti-securitization communication
  18. Concerning method and the study of political violence
  19. Acknowledgments
  20. Contents
  21. Front Matter
  22. Insurrection as a post-millennial, clandestine, network of cells
  23. Insurrection as history from Guy Fawkes to black blocs
  24. Insurrection as theory, text, and strategy
  25. Insurrection as values-driven theory and action
  26. Preface
  27. References
  28. The politics of attack
  29. List of figures
  30. Appendix: Methodology—Database Construction
  31. “Eco-Terrorism”: An Incident-Driven History of Attack (1973–2010)
  32. Activism, Terrorism, and Social Movements: The “Green Scare” as Monarchical Power
  33. Interpreting Insurrectionary Corpora: Qualitative-Quantitative Analysis of Clandestine Communiqués
  34. Sexuality, Assault, Police Infiltration and Foucault:
  35. Sexuality, Assault, Police Infiltration and Foucault
  36. Shooting Yourself in the Foot: Securitization, Critical Infrastructure, and the Gaza Strip
  37. towards a critical understanding and investigation of political violence
  38. When cops “go native”: policing revolution through sexual infiltration and panopticonism
  39. Reproducing a Culture of Martyrdom
  40. Deconstructing “eco-terrorism”: rhetoric, framing and statecraft as seen through the Insight approach
  41. Jah People: the cultural hybridity of white Rastafarians.
  42. Sister Species: Women, Animals, and Social Justice ed. by Lisa A. Kemmerer, and: Women and the Animal Rights Movement by Emily Gaarder
  43. Epilogue. Anarchism & Academia, Insurrection & Illegality: Age Old Tensions Revisited
  44. Donald Liddick. Eco-Terrorism: Radical Environmental and Animal Liberation Movements. Westport, Connecticut, Praeger Publishers, 2006
  45. Reproducing a Culture of Martyrdom