What is it about?
The existing literature tends to describe terrorist groups' life cycles not as cycles at all but as linear pathways. Some terrorist groups follow such pathways from birth to demise. Others are characterized by cyclical ups and downs in their prominence, influence and the violence they inflict and may experience a final decline only after a very long time. This cyclical oscillation in terrorist groups' life cycles can be explained by the intensity of competition for grass-roots support and the switching costs experienced by those supporters. Once they give support to a group, it is more difficult for them to be pried away either by a government or a competing group.
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Why is it important?
The life cycle of a terrorist group reflects, shapes and is shaped by the group's status, influence and brutality. Encompassing all of these features of a terrorist group's existence within a theory of terrorist group life cycles represents an advancement over the mostly linear life cycle models proposed in the literature.
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This page is a summary of: The Life Cycle of Terrorist Organizations, International Advances in Economic Research, June 2011, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s11294-011-9314-3.
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