Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Terrorists As Non-State Actors In World Politics. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. Terrorism is not an activity endorsed by global states as a means by which to address international hostilities; rather, it is a self-perpetuating form of anarchy that feeds off a minimal percentage of fundamentalists who have the capacity to inflict tremendous harm and damage. The extent to which terrorists act of their own accord is both grand and far-reaching; that their non-state status creates an even greater level of contempt and confusion speaks to the inescapable reality of innocent - and non-supporting - victims becoming indelibly involved. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTerrActor.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
minimal percentage of fundamentalists who have the capacity to inflict tremendous harm and damage. The extent to which terrorists act of their own accord is both grand and far-reaching;
that their non-state status creates an even greater level of contempt and confusion speaks to the inescapable reality of innocent - and non-supporting - victims becoming indelibly involved. "Nonstate
terrorism is seldom calculated, in a strategic sense, to bring about a beneficial result. Instead, it is often an undirected lashing out against perceived oppressors. What usually happens
is far worse repression, apparently justified by the terrorism."1 II. ACTING ON THEIR OWN IMPULSES The presence of terrorism unsupported by the
state is not even a remotely new concept within the timeline of mans existence; in fact, the extent to which social, political, economic and religious discord has precipitated at least
some sort of fundamentalist retaliation and/or intimidation throughout history speaks to the notion that humanity is both unsettled in mind and unevolved in spirit when it comes to the failed
objective to coexist even now in the twenty-first century. To define terrorism is to look at its distinction from a number of different
perspectives - not the least of which includes a non-state angle - inasmuch as the very nature of terrorist activity is based within a foundation of interpretation. For example,
someone may consider suicide attacks as a holy duty that has nothing whatsoever to do with the state. While this particular group of fundamentalists believe what they are doing
is a necessary response to strike back against oppression or an unjustifiable atrocity, more to the point is how they exemplify a way for the less powerful to impose significant
...