RT Article T1 Why They Fight: Ideology and Terrorist Motivation JF Terrorism and political violence VO 37 IS 7 SP 945 OP 960 A1 Holbrook, Baldvin Donald LA English YR 2025 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1936322609 AB There is a disconnect between the ideological and political nature of terrorism, on the one hand, and the apparent motives of terrorists on the other, where identification with that political and ideological context is often seen to be limited. This is arguably a central dilemma in the study of terrorism, which has practical implications too. In this article, I develop a three-pronged approach to address this dilemma. First, I explore how our theoretical understanding of ideology can underpin and expand our understanding of terrorist motivation and the distinctive characteristics of terrorism as political violence. Second, I explore the function of ideology empirically through direct observations of the role ideology played for convicted terrorists in the UK. Third, I draw observations from these two perspectives to address the challenges of ideological bricolage and ‘hybrid’ extremism. K1 Bricolage K1 Framing K1 Political Violence K1 Motivation K1 Ideology K1 terrorists K1 Terrorism DO 10.1080/09546553.2025.2544638