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Economic deprivation, ideology and terrorism
A system justification approach of domestic radicalization in the USA
(1948-2016)
Simon Varaine
Phd candidate in Political science
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Science Po Grenoble*, PACTE, 38000 Grenoble, France
* School of Political Studies Univ. Grenoble Alpes
Sciences Po Grenoble
1030 Avenue Centrale
38400 Saint-Martin-d'Hères - France
+33 6 07 90 02 23
Acknowledgement
I would like to thank Raul Magni-Berton, Laurent Bègue and Céline Belot for their insightful
comments and advises. This research is part of a Phd funded by the Communauté Université
Grenoble Alpes.
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Economic deprivation, ideology and terrorism
A system justification approach of domestic radicalization in the USA
(1948-2016)
Abstract
Objectives
Studies generally find no relationship between economic deprivation and terrorist activities,
leading to the conclusion that economic conditions have no role in the emergence of terrorist
movements. The present paper challenges this conclusion based on system justification
theory. It argues that collective deprivation affects participation into terrorism, but in different
directions depending on the ideology of terrorist movements: conservative terrorism should
mobilize more under times of collective deprivation while progressive terrorism should
mobilize more under times of collective improvement.
Methods
I test this hypothesis on the PIRUS database about domestic terrorists (N=1,527) in the United
States from 1948 to 2016. I analyse whether the proportion of right-wing (versus left-wing)
terrorists at a given year depends on collective deprivation in the US, operationalized through
long-term recession of the national income and long-term growth of inequalities.
Results
Multi-level logistic regression analyses confirm that right-wing terrorism mobilizes more
under periods of long-term economic deprivation, while left-wing terrorism mobilizes more
under improving economic conditions. Besides, the effect of collective deprivation appears to
be of socio-tropic nature since it is not mediated through the terrorist’s individual level of
deprivation. In contrast, results do not support the view that Islamist terrorism is affected by
collective deprivation.
Conclusions
The study (1) challenges the view that economic conditions have no role in triggering terrorist
activity and (2) supports recent development of system-justification theory implying that
ideology matters in the explanation of collective action.
Key words deprivation, terrorism, system justification, threat, radicalization
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1. INTRODUCTION
For the past decades, the common idea that terrorism emerges from situations of economic
deprivation has been disproven by several empirical studies. At the collective level, indicators
of economic contractions and inequality are not good predictors of the occurrence of terrorist
events (Piazza, 2006, Kurrild-Klitgaard et al., 2006, Abadie, 2006). At the individual level,
terrorists are not mostly drawn from impoverished backgrounds (Krueger & Malečková,
2003, Sageman, 2004, Krueger, 2008, Russell & Miller, 1977, Clark, 1983, Speckhard &
Akhmedova, 2006). As a consequence, various scholars have concluded that economic
deprivation has no role on the emergence of terrorist movements (Krueger, 2007, Piazza,
2006, Krieger & Meierrieks, 2011).
Recently, this conclusion has been challenged by the claim that collective deprivation has
opposite effects on terrorism depending on the ideology of terrorist groups (Varaine, 2018).
According to this hypothesis, collective deprivation - i.e. long-term economic recession and
long-term growth of inequalities - fosters conservative oriented terrorism while it decreases
progressive oriented terrorism. The underlying causal mechanism is based on system
justification theory (Jost & Banaji, 1994, Jost et al., 2011): collective deprivation, by
generating threat and uncertainty, motivates the adherence to system-justifying beliefs that are
the core of conservative ideologies. This in turn affects individual motives for collective
action - including violent collective action lead by terrorist groups: threatening situations
decrease the individual propensity to engage in progressive collective action and increase the
propensity to engage in conservative collective action (Jost et al., 2017a). Empirically,
Varaine (2018) found evidence of such an opposite effect of collective economic deprivation
on the mobilization level of conservative and progressive radical movements in the case of
France from 1882 to 1980.
This hypothesis meets a new body of research focusing on the determinants of distinct
terrorist ideologies. Indeed, recent studies have demonstrated that terrorism has heterogeneous
determinants depending on its ideology (Kis-Katos et al., 2014, Brockhoff et al., 2016), which
may explain the persisting lack of consensus on the core causes of terrorism. The system-
justification hypothesis follows this argument by predicting that collective deprivation
differently affects conservative and progressive terrorist ideologies. Moreover, this new
hypothesis offers a powerful explanation of the historical and geographical variations in the
ideological motives of terrorism. For instance, the 1929 financial crisis is likely to be a key
cause of the level of mobilization and violence of terrorist fascist leagues in the 1930s in
various European countries. In the opposite direction, the left-wing wave of terrorism in the
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1970s - incarnated for example by the Red Brigades in Italy, the Red Army Fraction in
Germany, the Weather Underground in the US and the Red Army in Japan - occurred after an
unprecedented period of economic prosperity. Nowadays, the re-emergence of right-wing and
xenophobic violent groups in Western countries coincides with economic stagnation and rise
of inequalities.
Yet, the empirical examination of this hypothesis has so far been limited. Firstly, the first
study testing the hypothesis (Varaine, 2018) was based on an ad hoc database suffering from
reliability and representativeness problems, thus requiring replication on other historical
cases. Secondly, we lack empirical clues to ascertain the individual causal mechanism.
Indeed, a key question is whether collective deprivation affects participation into terrorism
through the experience of individual deprivation or through the perception of a collective
threat. While the classic economic theory of terrorism predicts that individual deprivation
foster terrorism because it lowers the opportunity cost of participation into terror groups
(Freytag et al., 2011), the system justification hypothesis implies a socio-tropic mechanism.
Indeed, studies show that collective threats are far more determinant than individual threats in
affecting individuals’ ideological orientation (Feldman & Stenner, 1997, Stenner, 2005,
Onraet et al., 2013b), hence collective economic deprivation should affect the individual’s
propensity to participate into conservative or progressive terrorism independently from his/her
personal background. Thirdly, we have no evidence on whether the system justification
hypothesis account for the emergence of Islamist terrorism, whilst it is nowadays one of the
most prevalent form of political violence.
The present paper addresses these three issues together. Firstly, it provides a new empirical
test of the system justification hypothesis on the PIRUS database (START, 2017) about
domestic terrorists (N=1,417) in the United States from 1948 to 2016. I analyse whether the
proportion of right-wing (versus left-wing) terrorists at a given year depends on collective
deprivation in the US, operationalized through long-term recession of the national income and
long-term growth of inequalities. Multi-level logistic regression analyses confirm the
prediction that right-wing terrorism mobilizes more under periods of long-term economic
deprivation, while left-wing terrorism mobilizes more under improving economic conditions.
Secondly, the analyses support the view that the effect of collective deprivation is of socio-
tropic nature since it is not mediated through the terrorist’s individual level of deprivation.
Thirdly, the paper tests whether collective deprivation is a driving force behind the rise of
Islamist domestic terrorism in the US. Indeed, Islamist ideologies share definitional features
of conservative ideologies, such as the defence of tradition through the mythical theme of the
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golden age of Islam (Moghadam, 2009, Khosrokhavar, 2015), hence Islamist terrorism should
be positively related to contexts of collective deprivation. However, results do not support this
view, possibly because the reference group of potential Islamist recruits does not maps onto
the national group.
In the next section, I develop the literature on the economic determinants of terrorism and
detail the rationale and empirical background of the theory of a differential effect of collective
deprivation on conservative and progressive terrorism. I develop in section three the
hypotheses of the paper, including the socio-tropic mechanism and the implications of the
theory on the case of Islamist terrorism. I then detail my empirical strategy based on the
PIRUS database. In section five, I present the results and discuss them in section six.
2. LITERATURE
2.1. The inconsistent effect of economic deprivation on terrorism Terrorism is commonly defined as the use of violence by sub-national actors to achieve
political ends (Krueger, 2007). Radicalization refers to the individual process leading to the
justification and, eventually, the use of political violence (McCauley & Moskalenko, 2008).
The idea that economic deprivation is a root cause of political violence has a long-lasting
history, going from Aristotle to Tocqueville and Marx, and persists in the recent literature on
terrorism. The alleged deprivation-terrorism nexus is generally based on one of two
mechanisms. According to the opportunity cost argument, derived from the economics of
crime (Becker, 1968), economic deprivation lowers the cost for individuals to withdraw from
economically productive occupations hence increasing the number of potential recruits for
terror groups (see for instance Freytag et al., 2011). According to the grievance argument,
derived from frustration aggression theory (Dollard et al., 1939), economic deprivation and
especially deprivation relative to other individuals and groups generates a sense of discontent,
which fuels the propensity for political violence (see for instance Gurr, 1970).
2.1.1. Evidence at the collective level
Empirically, the two mechanisms both yield the prediction that societies facing recessions and
high inequality generate more terrorism. Indeed, low growth and unequal societies have by
definition a higher share of poor individuals, which are easy recruits for terror groups
according to the opportunity cost argument. Alternatively, economic recessions and high
inequality are supposed to induce discontent against the political power or upper classes and
hence motivate political violence, according to the grievance argument.
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However, results on this matter are disputed. While various cross-national studies do find that
societies facing economic recessions generate more terrorism (Blomberg et al., 2004, Caruso
& Schneider, 2011, Freytag et al. 2011, Ghatak & Gold, 2017, Kis-Katos, Liebert & Schulze,
2011�), others fail to find a significant relationship between economic growth and terrorism
(Drakos & Gofas, 2006, Kurrild-Klitgaard et al., 2006, Piazza, 2006, Krueger & Laitin,
2008). Using Granger-models to analyse domestic terrorism in seven European states from
1951 to 2004, Gries, Krieger and Meierrieks (2011) found that economic growth is causally
related to terrorism only in three out of seven countries. Recently, Choi (2014) found
evidence that industrial (and not agricultural) economic growth is negatively related to
domestic and transnational terrorism and positively related to suicide terrorism in a sample of
127 countries for 1970-2007.
Regarding the effect of inequality, results are also debated: whilst past research did not find
any relationship between inequality and terrorism (Abadie, 2006, Piazza, 2006, Kurrild-
Klitgaard et al., 2006) recent studies have contested this conclusion and supported the view
that inequality is a predictor of domestic terrorism (Krieger & Meierrieks, 2016, Piazza,
2017).
In sum, at a collective level, indicators of economic depressions and inequality do not appear
to be consistent and robust predictors of terrorism. This conclusion does not give much
support to both the opportunity-cost and grievance arguments.
2.1.2. Evidence at the individual level Individual data on terrorists’ backgrounds also cast doubts on the alleged deprivation-
terrorism nexus. Indeed, compared to their home countries’ population, terrorists are not
mostly drawn from the unprivileged. For instance, Krueger & Malečková (2003) found
members of lower class to be under-represented and educated individuals over-represented in
samples of Hezbollah members in Lebanon, Israeli Jew terrorists and Palestinian suicide
bombers. Similar conclusions have been drawn from samples of transnational jihadists
(Sageman, 2004), US homegrown jihadists (Krueger, 2008), Basque separatist terrorists
(Clark, 1983), Chechen suicide bombers (Speckhard & Akhmedova, 2006) and diverse
terrorist groups for the 1966-1976 period (Russel & Miller, 1977). Economic background and
level of education actually seem to vary across terrorists’ ideologies - leftist terrorists
generally coming from more educated and affluent backgrounds than rightists (Chermak &
Gruenewald, 2015, Smith & Morgan, 1994).
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The overall observation clearly refutes the opportunity cost argument that terrorists engage in
result of a lack of economic opportunities1. All in all, ideological goals seem to matter more
than material considerations to explain terrorism: to understand terrorism, as Krueger
concludes, “voting is a better analogy than crime” (2007: 146).
2.2. A system justification approach of the economic deprivation-terrorism nexus Based on the preceding results, various studies have concluded that economic deprivation
does not matter in the explanation of terrorism (Krueger, 2007, Piazza, 2006, Krieger &
Meierrieks, 2011). Yet, this conclusion has recently been challenged by the claim that
collective economic deprivation affects terrorism in different directions depending on the
ideology of terrorists: according to this new hypothesis, collective deprivation - i.e. long-term
economic recession and growth of inequalities - is positively related to the mobilization of
conservative terrorism and negatively related to the mobilization of progressive terrorism.
2.2.1. Theoretical foundation: system justification theory The theoretical foundation of this hypothesis lies in system justification theory. According to
system justification theory, people share inherent motivations to see the social system in
which they live as legitimate (Jost & Banaji, 1994, Jost et al., 2012), which they satisfy by
endorsing politically conservative cognitions that justify the societal status quo. In particular,
conservative cognitions are better able than progressive cognitions (i.e. which challenge the
societal status quo) to address universal existential motivation to reduce threat and epistemic
motivation to reduce uncertainty (Jost et al., 2003, Hennes et al., 2012, Jost et al., 2017b, Jost
et al., 2007). These psychological needs vary across chronic and situational conditions,
affecting the attractiveness of conservative versus progressive cognitions. For instance,
individual variation in existential needs - measured through the perception of a dangerous
world - and epistemic needs - measured through the need for cognitive closure - are strongly
related to the endorsement of conservative beliefs (see Jost, 2017 for a recent meta-analysis).
Similarly, experimentally induced threat and uncertainty have been shown to increase the
adherence to conservatism (see for instance Duckitt & Fischer, 2003, Nail et al., 2009,
Thórisdóttir & Jost, 2011).
2.2.2. Collective deprivation and system justification
1 Regarding the grievance argument, it remains possible that people resort to terrorism as the result, not of personal deprivation but on the behalf of economic deprivation experienced at a societal level. Yet, as presented earlier, the inconsistent relationship between collective deprivation and terrorism does not give much support to this alternative grievance argument.
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System justification theory offers a key explanation of the observed relationship between
collective economic deprivation and conservatism. Indeed, studies have for long noticed that
contexts of economic threat, such as recession periods, are related with enhanced right-wing
attitudes (Onraet et al., 2013a), far-right votes (Funke et al., 2016, De Bromhead et al., 2012)
and authoritarian behaviors (Sales, 1972, Sales, 1973, Doty et al., 1991). Moreover, individual
perceptions of collective economic threat are positively related to conservative attitudes
(Rickert, 1998, Feldman & Stenner, 1997, Onraet et al., 2013b). From a system justification
perspective, this so called authoritarianism-economic threat nexus (Rickert, 1998) is due to
the fact that system-justifying ideologies are inherently better at addressing the increased
feelings of threat induced by economic contractions. Experimental evidence supports this
view: Duckitt & Fischer (2003) found that the relationship between an induced socio-
economic declining scenario and authoritarianism was entirely mediated by the perception of
a societal threat.
2.2.3. The system justification model of collective action
Recently, Jost, Becker, Osborne and Badaan (2017) proposed integrating system justification
theory into the socio-psychological model of collective action (see van Zomeren et al., 2008).
They distinguished two ideological forms of collective action - system-challenging versus
system-supporting protest - and argued that these forms have different socio-psychological
antecedents. An important prediction of their model is that the occurrence and ideological
orientation of collective action should vary with the very factors that have been proven to
affect system justification. For instance, Hennes, Nam, Stern and Jost (2012) have found that
individual needs to reduce threat and uncertainty, by increasing system justification, were
positively related to support for the Tea Party - a conservative political movement - and
negatively related to support for Occupy Wall Street - a progressive political movement.
Similarly, Jost et al. (2012) found that a manipulations inducing uncertainty reduced
collective actions intentions among progressive political activists. Looking at more extreme
collective actions, Pauwels & Heylen (2017) recently found that perceived in-group threat, by
increasing authoritarianism, is eventually related to self-reported participation into right-wing
violence in a sample of young Belgian.
2.2.4. The system justification approach of the deprivation-terrorism nexus Based on the system justification model of collective action, it has been proposed that
collective deprivation, by generating threat and uncertainty, should increase the mobilization
level of conservative collective action and decrease the mobilization level of progressive
collective action (Varaine, 2018). Albeit formulated for collective action in general, this
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hypothesis applies for both normative and non-normative forms of collective action including
terrorism (Tausch et al., 2011). It is worth noting that this hypothesis is about long-term
variation of the economic situation of the majority of a given society, which may be captured
through the long-term variation of wealth and inequalities. The reason is that conjuncture
variations are not likely to shape in-depth psychological motivations for system justification.
Indeed, studies demonstrating a link between collective deprivation and conservatism
typically compare long-term threatening periods (Sales, 1972, Sales, 1973, Doty et al., 1991,
Funke et al., 2016) or long-term experimental scenario (Duckitt & Fischer, 2003).
This system justification hypothesis has important empirical implications for the study of
terrorism. Indeed, if corroborated, it would shed a new light on the historical and geographical
variations of terrorists’ ideologies. For instance, at a global level, various scholars have
noticed the huge expansion of left-wing oriented terrorism in the 1970s, often called the “third
wave” of modern terrorism (Rapoport, 2004, Shughart, 2006), and its decline after the 1980s.
This phenomenon was insofar mostly related to the Cold War and the Soviet financing of
terror groups (O’brien, 1996, Robinson et al., 2006). Yet, this explanation did not explain why
anti-communist and right-wing terrorism, albeit also financed by the United States (George,
1991), did not rise such a strong level of mobilization and activism. The present hypothesis
provides an alternative explanation, linking the popular success of left-wing radical groups to
unprecedented global rates of development among this period.
Similarly, the hypothesis fits geographical variations at a same historical period of the level of
terror experienced by countries. Taking again the 1970s-1980s period, one may observe that
Western democracies experienced variable mobilization and intensity of violence arousing
from New Left terror groups: huge in Italy with the Red Brigades, high in West Germany
with the Red Army Fraction, more limited in France with Action Direct and the United States
with the Weather Underground, and very contained in United Kindgom (see della Porta, 2006,
START, 2016). This ranking strikingly maps with the rate of economic development
experienced during the preceding decades by those countries: between 1950 and 1970, the
GDP per capita nearly quadrupled in Italy, tripled in West Germany, more than doubled in
France, less than doubled in the USA, and increased by a half in United Kingdom (The
Maddison-Project, 2013).
Empirically, the system justification hypothesis meets a new body of research investigating
the determinant of distinct terrorist ideologies. This research generally demonstrates the
heterogeneity of causes of different ideologies of terror groups (Kis-Katos et al., 2014,
Brockhoff et al., 2016, Robinson et al., 2006). Yet, these studies have so far focused on the
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effect of short-term economic indicators. Thus, to my knowledge, there has been no empirical
study directly testing the system justification hypothesis with the exception of Varaine (2018).
This study corroborated the hypothesis in the case of French radical movements - including
terrorist groups - from 1882 to 1980: long-term recession and long-term elevation of
inequality was positively related to the number of members of progressive radical
conservative movements and negatively related to the number of members of progressive
radical movements.
3. AIMS OF THE PRESENT RESEARCH
The present research aims at expanding the empirical examination of the system justification
hypothesis in three ways. Firstly, it offers an alternative test of the hypothesis on new data.
Secondly, the present research investigates the individual mechanism, at the level of terrorists,
by which collective deprivation affects conservative and progressive terrorism. Thirdly, the
paper analyses the relevance of the system justification hypothesis to explain Islamist
terrorism. I detail below the rationale for this three contributions.
3.1. A new empirical test of the system justification hypothesis
The previous empirical study testing the system justification hypothesis was based on an ad
hoc database suffering from reliability and representativeness problems (Varaine, 2018), thus
requiring replication on other historical cases. Hence, the first aim of the present study is to
test the hypothesis on a new historical case, based on more reliable data.
Moreover, the present research tests the system justification hypothesis in an alternative way.
The previous study focused on the effect of collective deprivation on the absolute number of
adherent of conservative and progressive radical movements. Another empirical formulation
of the hypothesis is that collective deprivation affects the main ideological orientation of
terrorists, that is the share of conservative versus progressive radical activists at a given
historical period. Indeed, the system justification hypothesis predicts that collective
deprivation generates a perception of social threat and uncertainty, which motivates the
individual adherence to system-justifying beliefs. This eventually increases the propensity for
conservative radicalization while it decreases the propensity for progressive radicalization.
Hence, under conditions of collective deprivation, terrorists should be mainly motivated by
conservative ideologies, while it should be mainly motivated by progressive ideologies under
times of collective improvement.
H1: collective deprivation increases the share of conservative terrorists (and decreases the
share of progressive terrorists).
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As in the previous study, collective deprivation is defined as the long-term variation of the
wealth of the majority of the population - which decomposes into both (a) the evolution of the
absolute level of wealth and (b) the evolution of economic inequality. These two factors -
collective wealth and inequality - should have opposite relationship with the orientation of
terrorism. Indeed, a positive growth of inequality at a constant level of absolute wealth means
that the majority of the population has became poorer.
H1a: long-term growth of wealth decreases the share of conservative terrorists (and
increases the progressive terrorists).
H1b: long-term growth of inequality increases the share of conservative terrorists (and
decrases the progressive terrorists).
3.2. The socio-tropic effect of economic deprivation on terrorism
There is currently no evidence on the individual mechanism by which collective deprivation
affects conservative versus progressive terrorism. A crucial question is whether collective
deprivation affects radicalization through the activist’s own experience of economic
deprivation or through the activist’s perception of a collective threat. In other word, it is worth
ascertaining whether the effect of collective deprivation is of ego-tropic or socio-tropic
nature.
The classic opportunity-cost argument implies an ego-tropic mechanism: collective
deprivation induce more terrorism because the higher share of deprived people enjoys a lower
opportunity cost of quitting economically productive occupation (Freytag et al., 2011). In
contrary, the system justification hypothesis implies a socio-tropic mechanism. Indeed, one
premise of the hypothesis is that terrorism, contrary to crime, is by essence an ideological
phenomenon (see Krueger, 2007) and hence should be reactive to the very factors that
activate ideological motivations. To this regard, various studies demonstrate that collective
threats - including collective deprivation - are far more determinants that individual threats in
shaping ideological orientations (Feldman & Stenner, 1997, Stenner, 2005). For instance, the
meta-analysis of Onraet et al. shows that situations and perceptions of collective threats,
including economic threat, relate strongly to conservative attitudes, while the relationship is
weak for personal threats: they conclude that “threat on the level of society, rather than
anxiety originating from one’s private life, is the key factor in explaining the relationship
between threat and right-wing attitudes” (2013b, 245).
This conclusion perfectly fits findings from the literature on collective action. Indeed,
research has for long noticed that individual perceptions about the in-group situation matters
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more than perception about one’s situation in explaining collective action intention (Koomen
& Fränkel, 1992, Walker & Mann, 1987, Smith et al., 2012).
Regarding the system justification hypothesis, this means that collective deprivation should
affect the ideological orientation of terrorists independently from their own experience of
economic deprivation:
H2: the effect of collective deprivation on the share of conservative terrorists (and the share
progressive terrorists) is not mediatized by the terrorists’ experience of economic deprivation.
Decomposing collective deprivation into wealth and inequality, this yields:
H2a: the effect of long-term growth of wealth on the share of conservative terrorists (and the
share progressive terrorists) is not mediatized by the terrorists’ experience of economic
deprivation.
H2b: the effect of long-term growth of inequality on the share of conservative terrorists (and
the share progressive terrorists) is not mediatized by the terrorists’ experience of economic
deprivation.
3.3. Economic deprivation and Islamist terrorism The system justification hypothesis directly aims at accounting for the mobilization of right-
wing versus left-wing oriented terrorism. However, the question remains open whether it may
account for the mobilization of terrorist ideologies that do not directly enter the left-right
dimension. The issue is especially sensible for Islamist terrorism, which is nowadays one of
the most prevalent form of political violence. I argue that the hypothesis may contribute
explaining the mobilization of Islamist terrorist to the extent that most Islamist ideologies
share definitional traits that categorize them as conservative. Indeed, salafi jihadism,
nowadays the most common Islamist terrorist ideology (Moghadam, 2009), has a clear
reactionary agenda in the sense that it advocates to a return to a mythicized golden age of
Islam (Moghadam, 2009, Torres et al., 2006, Khosrokhavar, 2015). More generally, salafi
jihadist beliefs fits the general outlook of authoritarian ideologies (Altemeyer, 1996, Stenner,
2005), through the recurring valorisation of obedience, social hierarchy, gender-based
divisions, moral purity and punitiveness against deviance (Khosrokhavar, 2015, Heghammer,
2017). Hence, as a conservative ideology, Islamist beliefs should be more appealing under
threatening social contexts, such as collective deprivation:
H3: collective deprivation increases the share of Islamist terrorists.
Decomposing collective deprivation into wealth and inequality, this yields:
H3a: long-term growth of wealth decreases the share of Islamist terrorists.
H3b: long-term growth of inequality increases the share of Islamist terrorists.
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4. METHOD To test the hypotheses, the present study focuses on the ideological orientation of domestic
terrorists in the United States from 1948 to 2016. I analyse whether the probability for
terrorists to be left-wing, right-wing and Islamist depends on the level of collective
deprivation experienced in the US during their radicalization process.
4.1. Data Analyses are based on the Profiles of Individual Radicalization in the United States (PIRUS)
dataset, collected by START (National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Response
to Terrorism). This dataset gathers systematic information on 1,867 radical activists in the
United States from 1948 to 2016. To my knowledge, this is currently the only attempt to
capture data on the whole universe of individual radical activists in a country for such a long
period, thus providing sufficient historical variation to test the effect of year-level variables.
Moreover, the historical and geographical focus of the dataset fortunately allows keeping
relatively constant variables that has proven to affect radical movements, such the
centralization level (Dreher & Fischer, 2011), the state capacity (Li & Schaub, 2004), long-
term cultural features (Wiedenhaefer et al., 2007), and the level of democracy (Abadie, 2006).
Individuals are included in the dataset if they enter one of the following criteria: 1) they were
arrested / indicted / killed by public forces as a result of an ideological crime, 2) they were
members of an organization that was designated as terrorist by the United States, or 3) they
were members of an organization whose leader has been indicted as a result of an ideological
crime. These criteria map onto the definition of terrorism as the use of violence, including
violence against property, by sub-national actors to achieve political ends.
The dataset focuses on domestic terrorism, which refers to individuals who were in the United
States during most of the duration of their radicalization process. This focus on domestic
terrorism is convenient for testing the present hypotheses. Indeed, collective deprivation in a
country should affect the ideological orientation of people belonging to the national group,
nor of people coming from abroad.
The PIRUS database is a collective effort based on publicly available sources. An inter-coder
reliability test performed on 10% of the cases yielded an alpha score of .76 (Jasko et al.,
2017), indicating that the dataset respects common standards of reliability (>.70). The use of
publicly available sources of information surely implies multiple biases, which are hard to
evaluate as far as the dimension of the population of interest is unknown. Nonetheless, I do
not see major reasons to expect that the under- or over-reporting of some activists would
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deeply alter the conclusions of my analyses. There are indeed good reasons to expect that the
year and the ideology of the activists respectively imply reporting biases: for example, past
events are likely to be under-reported because archival press records are more limited and less
easy of access than current press contents; similarly, right-wing activists may be differently
reported in public sources because their actions often target minority groups while left-
wingers generally attack governmental and private company targets. But, such biases should
not affect my analyses since I compare the temporal evolution of the relative frequency of
ideological orientations. In other words, there is no serious reason to expect that the reporting
biases of certain ideologies systematically vary across time, in parallel to the level of
collective deprivation.
4.2. Individual-level variables
Ideology. The dependent variable is the ideological orientation of radical activists. The
PIRUS dataset divides activists into four kinds of ideology: left-wing, right-wing, Islamist
and single-issue. I excluded single-issue activists from the sample because it gathers very
distinct political goals (e.g. anti-abortion, Puerto Rican independence, etc.) so it was difficult
to assert whether those activists were conservative or progressive.
To test H1 and H2, I analyse the probability for radical activists to be right-wing compared to
left-wing, which narrows the sample to N=1,070. The dependent variable is thus coded
0=left-wing (30.28% of the sample) and 1=right-wing (69,72% of the sample). This binary
opposition constitutes a fair measure of the distinction between progressive and conservative
terrorism. Indeed, most of right-wing terror groups in the PIRUS database can be defined as
conservative, albeit in an extreme sense, to the extent that they advocate for changing the
system to go back to an idealized past (Lipset & Raab, 1970, Parker & Barreto, 2014). This
reactionary orientation can take many forms: through the valorisation of the ethnical origins
of the nation (e.g. white supremacist groups such as the Klu Klux Klan, National Alliance, the
World Church of the Creator), the defence of traditional values and way of life (e.g. religious
fundamentalist groups such as the Army of God), the demise of the current institutions to
return to a past state of freedom (e.g. anti-federalist groups such as the Sovereign Citizen
Movement). In contrary, most of left-wing terror groups can be considered as progressive to
the extent that they advocate for ending-up with traditional societal arrangements to create a
new system. Similarly, this revolutionary orientation may take many forms: through
advocating of end of the capitalist economic system (e.g. anti-capitalist groups such as the
Weather Underground), the end of ethnical and identity-based discriminations (e.g. Black
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power groups such as the Black Panthers, the Black Liberation Group), the re-definition of
moral and legal rights (e.g. animal rights groups such as the Animal Liberation Front).
To test H3, instead of right-wing orientation, I analyse the probability for radical activists to
be Islamists compared to left-wing, which narrows the sample to N=781. The dependent
variable is thus coded, 0=left-wing (41.49% of the sample) and 1=Islamist (58.51% of the
sample).
Individual deprivation. To test whether the effect of collective deprivation affects the
ideological orientation of terrorists through individual deprivation (H2), I used measures of
the activists’ level of deprivation. The first is the social class of the activist when he/she was
adult which is coded 0=low (e.g. receives welfare, lives close to the poverty line, regularly
unemployed or at best works a blue collar job, lives in subsidized housing), 1=middle (e.g.
does not receive welfare, lives in lower-middle or middle class neighbourhood, has steady
professional employment, owns or holds a mortgage on a house, has college degree), 2=high
e.g. works a high-income, white-collar job, lives and owns a house in a middle or upper class
neighborhood, can afford luxury items, has college degree or is self-employed as a successful
entrepreneur). The second variable, using the same coding, is about the activists’ childhood.
The first variable measures individual absolute deprivation, while the second, when included
as a covariate of the first in the regression model, allow measuring the effect of the individual
deprivation relative to his/her past status.
Control variables. Previous studies found that several socio-economic characteristics are
distinctive of right-wing versus left-wing terrorism (Chermak & Grunewald, 2015, Russel &
Miller, 1977, Smith & Morgan, 1994): compared to left-wing terrorists, right-wing terrorists
are generally less educated, older; they are also more likely to be male and to have a criminal
record. I controlled for these variables and for other variables included in the PIRUS dataset
which could also affect the dependent variable such as military experience and belonging to
an ethnic minority.
5.3. Year-level variables
Long-term collective deprivation. I used two indicators of collective deprivation: the long-
term variation of the national wealth, measured by the growth of the mean American fiscal
income, and the long-term variation of inequalities, measured by the growth of the share of
the national pre-tax income owned by the 10% richest (WID, 2017). By long-term, I mean
around 10 years, as in the experimental scenario used by Duckitt & Fischer (2003). However,
I am agnostic on what long-term precisely mean - e.g., whether it is 6 or 14 years. In
consequence, similarly to the previous study (Varaine, 2018), I computed different temporal
15
specifications for the independent variables: the growth of the wealth and inequalities over 5,
10, 15 and 20 years. The main analyses presented in the paper use the 10 years specification.
Analyses with the other temporal specifications are presented in the online appendix and I
will produce comments about them in order to check the consistency of the results at different
temporal specifications. Regarding the directions of the relationships, H1 predicts that the
lower the increase of wealth (H1a) and the higher the increase of inequalities (H1b) the higher
the probability for the radical activists at a given period to be right-wing oriented (compared
to left-wing).
Control variables. I included other year-level variables to control for alternative hypotheses
that could account for the share of right-wing versus left-wing ideology among the radical
activists at different historical periods. First, I included a measure of the ideological position
of the governors coded 0=Republican (right-wing) presidency, 1=Democrat (left-wing)
presidency. Indeed, one may expect that right-wing movements are more likely to mobilize
activists under a Democrat presidency (and conversely under a Republican presidency).
Besides, whilst my focus is on economic collective threat, various study found that other
kinds of threat are related to surges of conservatism, and may thus increase the probability for
the activists of a given period to be right-wing oriented. First, various studies indicate that
existential threat increases conservatism (Jost et al., 2003). Consistent with this view, Onraet
et al. (2013a) found that a composite indicator including the national homicide rate was
positively related with conservative views on cross-national surveys. Thus I included the one-
year lagged homicide rate as a control variable. Second, some studies indicate that
authoritarian attitudes crystallize under conditions of threat affecting the perceived
homogeneity of the in-group (Stenner, 2005), in particular the share of ethnic minorities
(Velez & Lavine, 2017, McCann, 2008). To capture this, I used the one-year lagged
immigration rate as a proxy. Albeit it is important to control for these variables, the literature
is divided on whether these threats increase conservatism or affirm attitudes of both
conservative and liberals (Stenner, 2005, Velez & Lavine, 2017): notably, McCann (2008)
found that a composite state-level indicators combining crime and non-White percentage of
the population increase authoritarianism in conservative states and decrease it in liberal states.
4.4. Temporal connection between individual radicalization and year-level variables To test the effect of year-level collective deprivation on the probability for a given terrorist to
be conservative versus progressive, I had to determine for each individual the year in which
he/she became radical. Hopefully, the PIRUS dataset includes information on each radical
activist’s date of exposure, which refers to his/her earliest mention by the sources as a radical
16
(see the inclusion criteria): for example, it may be the day the activist carried out an illegal
action or the earliest day the sources reveal that he/she was part of a designated terrorist
organization. I used this information to merge year-level indicators with the PIRUS dataset:
that is, for each activist, year-level variables refer to the year the activist became radical. Fig
1. plots the number of radical activists by year of exposure and ideology.
[Insert figure 1 around here]
One may oppose that using the year of exposure of the activist is not the best choice on
theoretical grounds. Indeed, collective deprivation is likely to affect radicalization at an earlier
phase: it is likely to trigger cognitive and emotional disposability before the radicalization
actually happens, and to have limited effects on the individuals’ motivations and actions as
soon he/she starts radicalizing. During this second phase, factors such as network (Sageman,
2004), in-group interactions (McCauley & Moskalenko, 2008) and political opportunity
structure (della Porta, 2006) should be of greater influence. Hopefully again, the PIRUS
dataset includes a variable estimating the radicalization duration. The variable includes three
categories: less than a year, between one and five years, more than five years. I produced
analyses using this information to estimate the level of collective deprivation at the start of the
individual radicalization2. The information on the radicalization duration was only available
for a limited number of activists (N=782), thus narrowing the sample of right-wing and left-
wing activists to N=400. In consequence, the analyses based on this procedure, which are
presented in the online appendix, simultaneously provide an alternative test and a robustness
check on a sub-sample of activists. I will produce comments about the outcomes in the section
relative to the robustness checks.
4.5. Handling missing values The main issue with the PIRUS dataset is that various variables include a non-trivial number
of missing values, due to the lack of public information for some characteristics of radical
activists. Table 1 summarizes the share of missing values among the variables that I
previously described. Hopefully, the share of missing values is not of concern for both the
dependent variable (ideology) and the main explanatory variables (the growth of wealth and
inequalities). In contrary, the amount of missing values is of concern in the case of some
2 To obtain an estimation of the year in which the activists started to radicalize, I subtracted to the year of exposure 1 years for people whose radicalization lasted less than a year, 3 for people whose radicalization lasted between one and five years and 5 years for people whose radicalization lasted more than five years.
17
control variables (education, previous criminal activity and military experience) and the
measures of individual deprivation (especially childhood deprivation).
[Insert table 1 around here]
Jasko, Lafree and Kruglanski (2017) faced the same issue when using the PIRUS dataset, and
handled it by using a multiple imputation procedure3. This method is particularly suited for
the present case because listwise deletion would dramatically reduce the sample, despite the
fact that the main variables have almost no missing values. In consequence, I used the same
procedure as Jasko et al. (2017) to impute multiple values only for my secondary variables:
that is individual control variables and individual indicators of deprivation. To do this, I
generated 25 datasets with imputations based on chained equation using all the individual
level predictors used by Jasko et al. (2017).
5. RESULTS In this section, I present the results of multi-level logistic regression analyses of the ideology
of radical activists. I first provide general comments about my modelling strategy and the
outcomes related to the control variables. I then detail the results about the relationship
between radical ideology and indicators collective deprivation for 10 years, the effect of
individual deprivation and the analyses related to Islamist terrorism. I then comment
robustness checks based on different temporal specifications, using an alternative starting year
of radicalization and without multiple-imputed values.
5.1. General comments
To test H1 and H2, I performed multi-level logistic regression models to predict the
probability for a given activist to be right-wing versus left-wing: that is, I nested individual
activists into year-groups with random effects. Indeed, I had enough groups (Nb of years=61)
and observations per group (mean=17.54) to respect common standards for multi-level
modelling. Table 4 and the regression tables in the online appendix B present the
unstandardized coefficients from regression models in ascendant steps: step I estimates an
empty model; step II and III respectively include the collective deprivation indicators (growth
of wealth and growth of inequalities), and step IV includes these variables together; step V
3 This method generates multiple datasets in which the missing values are filled with various predicted values based on multiple regression models including other variables from the dataset. That is, the method maximises all the available information in the dataset to estimate predictions of the missing cases. Contrarily to other methods imputation (such as interpolation or simple imputation), it does not fill the missing cases with one specific value, but with a chosen number of estimations which reflect the degree of uncertainty about the true value.
18
and VI respectively include year-level and individual level control variables, and step VII
includes both; finally step VIII includes the indicators of individual deprivation.
[Insert table 2 around here]
Estimates from the empty model in table 2 confirm that there is considerable year-level
variance in the dataset, and thus strongly justify the multi-level modelling strategy. Indeed,
the log of the group-level variance is significantly different from zero (lnsig2u=.86, p=.002)
and the Intra-class correlation (ICC) indicates that 41.76% of the total variance in the sample
is accounted by the year-level variance. This proportion is considerable: this means that
nearly half of the variation in the probability for the activists of the sample to be right-wing
depends on the year in which they became radicals. In other words, historical factors are of
great matter to explain the ideological orientation of radical activists.
Before focusing on the test of my hypotheses, I shall comment the outcomes relative to the
control variables. First, regarding the year-level variables, results from table 2 indicate that
the political orientation of the presidency is the only year-level control variable yielding a
significant effect on the probability for a radical exposure to be right-wing oriented. As
expected, radical exposures are more likely to be right-wing under a Democrat presidency (in
model VIII: B=1.02, p=.004). In contrast neither the lagged immigration rate (B=-.05,
p=.730) nor the lagged homicide rate (B=-.03, p=.803) display significant relationships with
the ideological orientation or radical activists, suggesting that existential and normative
threats do not specifically increase right-wing radicalization. In fact, this could either mean
that such threats do not affect radicalization or that existential and normative threats radicalize
both conservatives and progressives in opposite directions (Stenner, 2005, McCann, 2008,
Velez & Lavine, 2017).
Besides, most coefficients of individual-level variables are significant and in the expected
direction: having completed a higher degree than high school (In model VIII, B=-1.57,
p=.012) and belonging to an ethnic minority (B=-2.40, p<.001) both decrease the activists’
probability of being right-wing compared to left-wing, while being a man (B=1.65, p<.001),
relatively old (B=.08, p<.001) and having been previously involved in violent non-political
crimes (B=.93, p=.025) increase one’s likelihood of being right-wing. The relationship
between military experience and with right-wing orientation does not attain statistical
significance (B=.53, p=.162).
5.2. Main results
5.2.1. Collective deprivation and right-wing versus left-wing radicalization
19
In line with H1, results from table 2 consistently show that indicators of long-term collective
deprivation affect the ideological orientation of radical activists. Both the growth of wealth
and the growth of inequalities since 10 years display the expected significant relationship with
the probability for a radical activist to be right-wing oriented, and those relationships remain
significant when including both variables in the same model (step IV) and when controlling
for other relevant variables (steps V to VII). In line with H1a, the higher the growth of the
average fiscal income over 10 years, the lower the probability for radical activists of being
right-wing (in model VIII: B=-6.42, p<.001); in line with H1b, the higher the growth of the
share of the pre-tax national income owned by the 10% richest over 10 years the higher the
probability for radical activists of being right-wing (in model VII: B=7.82, p=.010). Plus,
these variables have a considerable explanatory power: while the share of variance accounted
by the year-level was 41.76% in the empty model, the inclusion of the collective deprivation
variables reduces this share to 24.38%. In particular, the long-term growth of the national
wealth has a substantive explanatory power: the inclusion of this variable withdraws the
significance of the log of the year-level variance (in model II: lnsig2u=.42, p>.10). This
means that, when taking into account the long-term growth of national wealth, the remaining
year-level variance in the share of right-wing activists is likely to be due to chance.
5.2.2 The socio-tropic effect of collective deprivation Model VIII includes indicators of individual-level deprivation. If the relationship between
collective deprivation and the ideological orientation of radical activists was mediated by
individual deprivations (the ego-tropic mechanism), the coefficients of these indicators would
be significant and their inclusion would reduce the absolute value of the coefficients of the
collective deprivation indicators. This is clearly not the case. Both the activist’s social class as
an adult and as a child do not significantly alter his/her probability of being right-wing, and
the inclusion of those variable has no effect on the coefficients of the collective deprivation
indicators - that is, the growth of wealth (H2a) and the growth of inequality (H2b). Thus the
evidence strongly supports the hypothesis (H2) that the effect of collective deprivation on
radicalization is of socio-tropic nature: that is, it does not affect radicalization through the
activist’s own experience of deprivation.
[Insert figures 2 and 3 around here] Based on model VIII, I predicted the probability for a radical activist of being right-wing
depending on the level of long-term deprivation, at average value for other covariates. Fig. 2
and 3 respectively plot those predictions depending on the growth of wealth and the growth of
inequalities for 10 years. These predictions clearly support H1. In line with H1a, the predicted
20
probability for a radical activist of being right-wing (compared to left-wing) goes from 95%
when the average American fiscal income has decreased of 10% in 10 years, such as in 2010,
to 46% when the average American fiscal income has increased of 40%, such as in 1968.
Conversely, the predicted probability for a radical activist of being right-wing (compared to
left-wing) goes from 61% when the share of the American pre-tax income owned by the 10%
richest has decreased of 5%, such as in 1960, to 92% when the average American fiscal
income has increased of 20%, such as in 1988.
5.2.3. The effect of collective deprivation on Islamist domestic terrorism
To test H3, I performed similar multilevel logistic regression analyses than for H1 and H2,
except that the dependent variable is now the probability for a radical activist to be Islamist
(compared to left-wing). To gain space, table 3 directly presents models including all
covariates - that is, except for the dependent variable, model I of table 3 is the same than
model VIII of table 2.
[Insert table 3 around here]
At a first look, results seem to support H3. Indeed, in model I of table 3, the coefficients
related to the collective deprivation indicators are significant and in the expected direction: in
line with H3a, the higher the growth of national wealth for the past 10 years the lower the
probability for radical activists to be Islamist (versus left-wing) (B=-18.94, p<.001); in line
with H3b, the higher the growth of inequalities the higher the probability for radical activists
to be Islamist (versus left-wing) (B=24.73, p=.004).
Nonetheless, model II of table 3, which controls for a simple linear year effect, contradicts
this view. Indeed, estimates from model 2 indicate that the probability for radical activists is
growing over time (the coefficient of the year linear variable is significantly positive, B=.31,
p<.001), and that controlling for this simple time trend entirely capture the previous effects of
the collective deprivation variables, which are no longer significant (for the variation of the
national wealth, B=2.10, p=.598 ; for the variation of inequalities, B=-8.20, p=.268). This
means that the statistical relationships in model I were simply reflecting the fact that both the
share of Islamist activists, and the level of collective deprivation have grown over time in the
case under study. In contrary, model III of table 2 indicates that controlling for a linear year
effect does not alter the previous results regarding the share of right-wing (versus left-wing)
domestic terrorists. Indeed, the estimates are similar to the coefficient of model VIII in table
2. In conclusion, the analyses do not support the view that collective deprivation increases the
share of Islamists among domestic terrorists (H3). I will discuss this result in the conclusion
of the paper.
21
Interestingly, results from the individual control variables indicate that Islamist domestic
terrorist display mostly similar socio-demographic features than left-wingers, whilst we
noticed that there was great differences in the profiles of right-wing versus left-wing domestic
terrorists. Indeed, the only stable and significant differences are the share of people from
ethnic minorities which is unsurprisingly higher among Islamists compared to left-wingers (in
model II, B=4.02, p<.001) and military experience: Islamists are more likely to have had a
military experience than left-wingers, even though this effect is small both in size and
significance (in model II, B=1.50, p=.050). The other socio-demographic variables have no
significant effect on the probability to be Islamist compared to left-wing.
5.3. Robustness checks Finally, I performed a series of tests to check the robustness of the results regarding H1 and
H2.
5.3.1. Tests on different temporal specifications As the previous study (Varaine, 2018), I performed similar regression models using different
temporal specifications for the indicators of collective deprivation: that is, the growth of the
wealth and the growth of inequalities for 5, 15 and 20 years. The results are presented in the
online appendix. Firstly, in line with H1, no analyses report significant opposite relationships
at any temporal specification: that is, the coefficients of the indicators of collective
deprivation are either significant in the expected direction or non-significant. I consider that
this result corroborates H1.
Moreover, the growth of the national wealth displays a significant relationship with the
activists’ ideology in every temporal specification, which indicates a very robust relationship.
The growth of inequalities has a consistent significant effect on the activists’ ideology only in
short-term specifications (the variation for 5 and 10 years) while it has mostly non-significant
effects in long-term specifications (the variation for 15 and 20 years).
5.3.2. Alternative measure of the period of radicalization
To further check the robustness of the results, I first performed similar regression models on
the sub-sample of radical activists for which I had information on their radicalization duration
(N=400) and using the year they started to radicalize as the basis for merging the data with the
year-level variables. Results are presented in the online appendix. They are mostly similar to
the results of the main analyses.
5.3.2. Tests without multiple imputed values
Then, I also tested my models on the original dataset (without multiple imputed values)
excluding the control variables for which the amount of missing cases was of concern
22
(education, previous criminal activity and military experience). The results are presented in
the online appendix. Again, they are mostly similar to the results of the main analyses.
Notably, the effect of the growth of inequalities for 5 years and the effect of the growth of the
national wealth at every temporal specification remains significant on a narrow sample of 159
activists (that is, when including the individual deprivation indicators without multiple
imputed values). This indicates that the results, especially regarding the growth of the national
wealth, are strongly robust.
6. CONCLUSION
Contrary to a widespread opinion, research has not given much support to the theory that
economic deprivation is a core cause of terrorism, leading to the conclusion that terrorism has
little to do with economic conditions (Krueger, 2007, Piazza, 2006, Krieger & Meierrieks,
2011). The present paper challenges this conclusion based on system justification theory.
Contrary to classic approaches of the terrorism-deprivation nexus based on the economic of
crime (Freytag et al., 2011) and frustration aggression theory (Gurr, 1970), the present theory
argues that collective deprivation has differential effects on terrorism depending on its
ideology: conservative terrorism should mobilize more in periods of economic deprivation
whilst progressive terrorism should mobilize more in times of economic improvement.
Empirical results corroborate this view, by showing that the ideological orientation of
domestic radical activists in the USA since World War II is closely related to the level of
economic deprivation experienced at the national level: long-term recession of the national
wealth and growth of inequality are related to a conservative orientation of domestic
terrorism. These results match with recent findings on French radical movements (Varaine,
2018).
The present work supports recent developments of system justification theory implying that
ideology matters in the explanation of collective action (Jost et al., 2017). Indeed, collective
action, including violent action by terrorist groups (Tausch et al., 2011), is by essence
ideological insofar as it reveals individual preferences about the prevailing social system (Jost
et al., 2017). For that reason, individual propensity to join collective action should be related
to the very factors that affect ideological motivations. This conjecture was so far mostly
supported by studies on normative or moderately non-normative collective action intentions
(Jost et al., 2012, Hennes et al., 2012, Osborne & Sibley, 2013). The present study indicates
that system-justification theory is also relevant to explain radical collective action.
23
The present paper highlights that research on terrorism should treat it as an ideological
phenomenon, or as stated by Krueger, that to understand terrorism “voting is a better analogy
than crime” (2007: 146). The present study has focused on collective economic deprivation,
because it has for long been shown that collective deprivation is a key determinant of
ideological orientation (Sales, 1972, Sales, 1973, Doty et al., 1991, Onraet et al., 2013a), and
voting choices in particular (Funke et al., 2016, De Bromhead et al., 2012). Yet, there are
good reasons to expect that other factors have different relationship with different ideological
forms of terrorism. Indeed, recent studies have demonstrated that many variables that had
been thought to uniformly cause terrorism in fact have distinct effects on left-wing, right-
wing, separatist or religious terrorism (Kis-Katos et al., 2014, see also Brockhoff et al., 2016).
This heterogeneity of terror may explain the current lack of consensus on the core causes of
terrorism (Kis-Katos et al., 2011, de Mesquita, 2008). Hence, future research would benefit
from disaggregate terrorism into different ideological categories.
This paper has two main limitations. The first is about the psychological causal mechanism
linking collective deprivation and radicalization. The present evidence indicates that the effect
of collective deprivation is not ego-tropic: that is, it does not affect radicalization through the
activist’s experience of deprivation, but more probably through the perception of a social
threat. This finding is consistent with the literature on ideology, which shows that collective
threats are more determinant than individual threats in influencing individual conservative
attitudes (Onraet et al., 2013b, Feldman & Stenner, 1997, Stenner, 2005). Yet, the present
data on radical activists does not allow testing directly the psychological mechanism that I
have put forward, which would require measuring mediating psychometric factors such as
individual needs to reduce threat and uncertainty (Jost et al., 2003, Hennes et al., 2012).
Disparate evidence supports the alleged causal mechanism: for instance, Pauwels and Heylen
(2017) found that perceptions of group-level threat, through increasing right-wing
authoritarianism, predicted youth involvement in right-wing violence, and Rieger et al. (2017)
found that individuals primed with a scenario of collective economic threat felt more
uncertain, which, in interaction with authoritarianism, increased their interest in right-wing
extremist propaganda. However, more experimental and survey data is needed to conclude
that collective deprivation does increase conservative radicalization through the experience of
threat and uncertainty.
Secondly, cross-sectional research would be needed both in general to assert the robustness of
the findings and in particular to test whether the theory accounts for Islamist terrorism.
Indeed, whilst the empirical analyses do not support it, it would be premature to entirely reject
24
the hypothesis that collective deprivation drives Islamist domestic terrorism. Actually, one
may conclude from the present analyses that the data is insufficient to conclude, because
Islamist terrorism is a too recent phenomenon in the case under study to relate it to historical
explanatory factors. This means that the hypothesis should be tested in a cross-sectional rather
than in a longitudinal way. Nonetheless, one could also argue from the data that collective
deprivation is not likely to be a major cause behind Islamist domestic terrorism because, if it
was so, indicators of collective deprivation would kept explaining some of the proportion of
Islamist terrorism even when controlling for a simple linear time trend. Indeed, the level of
collective deprivation has not followed a perfectly linear pattern during the last years in the
case under study. Thus, if the hypothesis was true, small changes from the linear evolution of
the level of collective deprivation would have affected the share of Islamist terrorists, which
is not the case.
From a theoretical point of view, another possibility is that the absence of effect of collective
deprivation on the share of Islamist domestic terrorists is due to the fact that the reference
group of potential Islamist recruits does not map onto the American national group. Indeed, a
premise of the theory is that collective threat affects the individuals’ ideological orientation
only if they minimally identify with the group under threat. In the case of radical Islamists, it
is possible that this mechanism occurs, but not on the basis of the American in-group. In
consequence, it should not be so surprising for the mobilization level of American Islamists to
be unrelated with the American-level deprivation, which I analyse in this paper. In contrast, it
would be relevant for future research to test whether Islamist domestic terrorism is affected by
deprivation experienced by American Muslims in particular, or by Muslim populations from
abroad.
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Table 1: share of missing values among the variables for the sample of
right-wing and left-wing radical activists Valid N % missing Year-level variables Δ average fiscal income since 10 years 1026 4,1% Δ share of the national income owned by the richest 10% since 10 years 1026 4,1% Left-wing government 1057 1,2% Net migration rate (lagged) 1067 0,3% Homicide rate (lagged) 1023 4,4% Individual-level variables Ideology 1070 0,0% Education 328 69,3% Age 1022 4,5% Gender 1070 0,0% Military experience 611 42,9% Previous criminal activity 534 50,1% Ethnicity 971 9,3% Social stratum (adulthood) 451 57,9% Social stratum (childhood) 214 80,0%
Table 2: unstandardized coefficients from multi-level logistic regression analyses of right-wing radical exposure (left-wing as reference)
Predictors I II III IV V VI VII VIII Year-level variables Δ wealth over the past 10 years -6.67 (1.47)*** -6.21 (1.34)*** -6.81 (1.23)*** -6.14*** (1.45) -6.42*** (1.40) -6.42*** (1.40) Δ inequality over the past 10 years 8.56 (2.79)*** 7.44 (2.46)*** 9.40 (2.62)*** 5.66** (2.63) 7.75** (3.02) 7.82*** (3.02) Left-wing government 0.81 (0.29)*** 1.02*** (0.35) 1.02*** (0.36) Net migration rate (lagged) -0.04 (0.14) -0.05 (0.17) -0.06 (0.17) Homicide rate (lagged) -0.10 (0.09) -0.03 (0.10) -0.03 (0.10) Individual-level variables Education (Less than high school as reference) High school -0.24 (0.41) -0.30 (0.41) -0.28 (0.42) More than high school -1.63*** (0.60) -1.63*** (0.60) -1.58*** (0.61) Age 0.08*** (0.01) 0.08*** (0.01) 0.08*** (0.01) Male (Female as reference) 1.62*** (0.34) 1.62*** (0.34) 1.65*** (0.35) Military experience (None as reference) 0.53 (0.37) 0.59 (0.38) 0.53 (0.38) Previous criminal activity (None as reference) Previous (nonviolent) minor activity 0.44 (0.33) 0.44 (0.33) 0.41 (0.35) Previous (nonviolent) serious activity 0.47 (0.44) 0.53 (0.45) 0.44 (0.48) Previous violent crime 1.01** (0.42) 1.02** (0.41) 0.93** (0.41) Minority status (No as reference) -2.40*** (0.37) -2.38*** (0.37) -2.40*** (0.40) Social stratum, adulthood (Low as reference) Middle 0.46 (0.58) High 0.81 (0.80) Social stratum, childhood (Low as reference) Middle 0.16 (0.60) High -0.01 (0.98) Constant 0.99 (0.23)*** 2.05 (0.31)*** 0.37 (0.29) 1.41*** (0.34) 0.17 (1.14) -1.37** (0.63) -3.71*** (1.43) -4.42*** (1.50) lnsig2u 0.86 (0.26)*** 0.42 (0.29) 0.66 (0.28)** 0.06 (0.34) -0.35 (0.37) 0.12 (0.39) -0.19 (0.42) -0.22 (0.44) ICC 42% 32% 37% 24% 17% 26% 20% 20% Nomber of observations 1,070 1,026 1,026 1,026 1,023 1,026 1,023 1,023 Number of groups (Years) 61 60 60 60 58 60 58 58
Standard errors in parentheses *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1
1
Table 3: unstandardized coefficients from multi-level logistic regression analyses of Islamist and right-wing radical exposure (left-wing as reference)
Outcome Islamist Right-wing Predictors I II III
Year-level variables Δ wealth over the past 10 years -18.94*** (3.95) 2.10 (3.99) -8.17*** (2.01) Δ inequality over the past 10 years 24.73*** (8.69) -8.20 (7.40) 9.93*** (3.51) Left-wing government -0.44 (0.68) 0.11 (0.56) 0.90** (0.37) Net migration rate (lagged) 0.25 (0.39) -0.34 (0.29) 0.06 (0.19) Homicide rate (lagged) -1.29*** (0.24) 0.33 (0.33) -0.14 (0.14) Year (linear) 0.31*** (0.07) -0.03 (0.02) Individual-level variables Education (Less than high school as reference)
High school -0.07 (0.83) -0.03 (0.80) -0.28 (0.42) More than high school -1.17* (0.69) -1.08 (0.68) -1.58*** (0.61) Age 0.01 (0.02) 0.01 (0.02) 0.08*** (0.01) Male (Female as reference) 0.92 (0.58) 0.93* (0.55) 1.66*** (0.35) Military experience (None as reference) 1.49* (0.77) 1.50** (0.76) 0.53 (0.38) Previous criminal activity (None as reference)
Previous (nonviolent) minor activity -0.59 (0.55) -0.60 (0.53) 0.40 (0.35) Previous (nonviolent) serious activity -0.82 (0.88) -0.70 (0.84) 0.43 (0.48) Previous violent crime -0.27 (0.82) -0.37 (0.77) 0.93** (0.41) Minority status (No as reference) 4.22*** (0.53) 4.02*** (0.50) -2.38*** (0.40) Social stratum, adulthood (Low as reference) Middle -0.24 (0.83) -0.28 (0.81) 0.46 (0.58) High 0.17 (1.19) 0.19 (1.18) 0.81 (0.80) Social stratum, childhood (Low as reference) Middle 0.60 (0.75) 0.56 (0.72) 0.17 (0.60) High 0.20 (1.03) 0.11 (1.05) -0.01 (0.99)
Constant 5.41* (2.87) -629.14*** (137.98) 48.23 (43.24)
lnsig2u 0.98* (0.58) -3.04 (11.86) -0.22 (0.44) ICC 45% 1% 20% Nomber of observations 709 709 1,023 Number of groups (Years) 51 51 58
Standard errors in parentheses *** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1