Windisch Steven, Simi Pete, Blee Kathleen M, DeMichele Matthew
Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University.
Department of Sociology at Chapman University.
Perspect Terror. 2020 Dec;14(6):65-76.
Drawing upon in-depth life-history interviews with 91 North American-based former white supremacists, we examine how participants perceive homicidal violence as either an appropriate or inappropriate political strategy. Based on the current findings, participants considered homicidal violence as largely inappropriate due to moral concerns and its politically ineffective nature but also discussed how homicidal violence could be an appropriate defensive measure in RAHOWA (Racial Holy War) or through divine mandate. Capturing how white supremacists frame the permissibility of homicidal violence is a step toward better understanding the "upper limit" or thresholds for violence among members who are trying to construct and negotiate a collective identity that involves violent and aggressive worldviews.
通过对91名北美前白人至上主义者进行深入的生活史访谈,我们研究了参与者如何将杀人暴力视为一种合适或不合适的政治策略。基于目前的研究结果,参与者认为杀人暴力在很大程度上是不合适的,原因包括道德方面的顾虑及其政治上的无效性,但他们也讨论了在“种族圣战”(RAHOWA)或通过神的旨意下,杀人暴力如何可能成为一种合适的防御手段。了解白人至上主义者如何界定杀人暴力的可容许性,是朝着更好地理解那些试图构建和协商一种涉及暴力和激进世界观的集体身份的成员之间暴力的“上限”或阈值迈出的一步。