Right-Wing Terrorism and Violence in Western Europe: Introducing the RTV Datase
Abstract
What is the record of right-wing terrorism and violence (RTV) in Western Europe post-1990? To date, RTV
incident data suitable for temporal and cross-national comparisons have been lacking. Consequently, few
comparative studies of RTV exist, and we generally have limited knowledge about the most recent evolution of
RTV in Western Europe. To help fill these gaps, this article introduces a new dataset covering RTV incidents in
Western Europe between 1990 and 2015. Including the most severe types of incidents only, the dataset comprises
578 incidents, including 190 deadly incidents causing 303 deaths. Each incident has been manually researched
by the same person and coded on a range of variables, including time and location, perpetrator and victim
characteristics, organizational affiliations, weapon types, and number of casualties. The article also proposes
six hypotheses aiming to explain the perhaps most puzzling finding emerging from the RTV dataset: that the
number of deadly incidents has declined considerably under conditions commonly assumed to stimulate RTV.
These conditions include increased immigration, enhanced support to radical right parties, Islamist terrorism,
and booming youth unemployment rates.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12242/580https://ffi-publikasjoner.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/20.500.12242/580
Description
Ravndal, Jakob Aasland.
Right-Wing Terrorism and Violence in Western Europe: Introducing the RTV Datase. Perspectives on Terrorism 2016 ;Volum 10.(3) s. 2-15