Religious terrorism is a type of religious violence where terrorism is used as a strategy to achieve certain religious goals or which are influenced by religious beliefs and/or identity.
In the modern age, after the decline of ideas such as the divine right of kings and with the rise of nationalism, terrorism has more often been based on anarchism, and revolutionary politics. Since 1980, however, there has been an increase in terrorist activity motivated by religion.
Former United States Secretary of State Warren Christopher said that terrorist acts in the name of religion and ethnic identity have become "one of the most important security challenges we face in the wake of the Cold War." However, political scientists Robert Pape and Terry Nardin, social psychologist Brooke Rogers, and sociologist and religious studies scholar Mark Juergensmeyer have all argued that religion should only be considered one incidental factor and that such terrorism is primarily geopolitical.
According to Juergensmeyer, religion and violence have had a symbiotic relationship since before the Crusades and even since before the Bible. He defines religious terrorism as consisting of acts that terrify, the definition of which is provided by the witnesses – the ones terrified – and not by the party committing the act; accompanied by either a religious motivation, justification, organization, or world view. Religion is sometimes used in combination with other factors, and sometimes as the primary motivation. Religious terrorism is intimately connected to current forces of geopolitics.
Bruce Hoffman has characterized modern religious terrorism as having three traits:
The perpetrators must use religious scriptures to justify or explain their violent acts or to gain recruits.
Clerical figures must be involved in leadership roles.
Perpetrators use apocalyptic images of destruction to justify the acts.
Important symbolic acts such as the blood sacrifice link acts of violence to religion and terrorism.
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La violence religieuse est une violence suscitée ou justifiée par une religion qui peut se traduire par un comportement individuel mortifère, un conflit communautaire, une , ou des persécutions religieuses. La religion a été jusqu’à la période moderne, étroitement liée à la politique ainsi que corrélée aux conditions économiques, de telle sorte qu’il est parfois historiquement erroné de considérer que des violences sont exclusivement d’origine religieuse.
Nationalist terrorism is a form of terrorism motivated by nationalism (often ultranationalism). Nationalist terrorists seek to form self-determination in some form, which may take the form of gaining greater autonomy, establishing a completely independent sovereign state (separatism), or joining another existing sovereign state with which the nationalists identify (irredentism). Nationalist terrorists often oppose what they consider to be occupying, imperial, or otherwise illegitimate powers.
Le terrorisme islamiste, terrorisme djihadiste ou terrorisme islamique fait référence aux attentats et aux autres actions de terrorisme commis par les membres ou sympathisants de mouvements islamistes. L'objectif visé par le terrorisme islamiste est la promotion d'une vision religieuse radicale du monde. Les organisations qui y recourent le perçoivent comme un commandement divin.