‘This impressive book is an outstanding contribution to the study of insurgent groups. While focusing on Hamas as a case in point, Davis has formed a new methodology for studying the relationship between insurgent groups' public support and their decision to use violence. Using both interviews with a broad array of actors and observers and sophisticated quantitative analysis of violent activity and public opinion polls, Davis' work has set a new standard of research in the area of political violence. It is a must reading for anyone interested in this field.’ Ariel Merari, Tel Aviv University, Israel
‘This book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand the complexity of the conflict and the tensions between Hamas and other rival groups in the Middle East. The analysis is based on solid empirical data and uses modern methodologies of field work, analyzing sacred values and statistical evidence for exploring Hamas's use of violence. Its conclusions would be a great help to the US and its allies in defeating radicalism, and have therefore implication for ISIS as well.’ MG (ret.) Isaac Ben-Israel, Israeli Space Agency, Israel
‘An insightful study of Hamas behavior and use of violence. It fills a serious gap in our knowledge of the group’s decision making process and the critical role played by public opinion in its calculus. Furthermore, the book provides a greater understanding of the role of violence in Palestinian-Israeli relations since the signing of the Oslo agreement in 1993. The special focus on the second intifada helps us better understand the dynamics of its eruption as well as its resilience and the reasons it gradually abated. The discussion on the Palestinian 2006 elections helps us understand how Hamas shrewdly capitalized on its intifada years to integrate itself into the Palestinian political system. As the book traces the evolution of Hamas-Israel relations and wars, it also provides an excellent examination of Hamas’ regional calculations during and after the "Arab Spring," as well as its relations with its domestic counterpart, Fatah, reconciliation efforts, and its governance record in the Gaza Strip. The book provides a good example of the predicament a militant Islamist group faces between its responsibility to care for the population that elects it and its own "resistance" value that the group declares to be its essence.’ Khalil Shikaki, Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, Palestinian Territories
‘Using multiple methods and drawing upon a diverse array of sources, including information gathered during fieldwork in the Palestinian Territories and in Israel, this impressive volume offers, first, a thorough account of Hamas’s evolution across a periodized history of the years between the first intifada and the present and, second, a careful testing of hypotheses about the determinants and consequences of politically motivated violence. Filled with valuable information and insight, the book can be read with much profit both as rich and detailed history and as a theoretically-motivated investigation into political violence. Essential reading for those interested in the organization, behavior, and strategic thinking of Hamas and in generalizable insights about the use of violence by insurgent groups.’ Mark Tessler, University of Michigan, USA
'Rich Davis has taken a giant leap forward in the study of insurgent groups by analysing the relationships between the armed group and its community support base, and the dynamics in its use of violence. Focusing on Hamas, Davis has provided us with an impressive mixed methods study, including interviews with insurgent and counterinsurgent leaders, an intricate examination of opinion poll data, and a detailed plotting and contextualisation of acts of violence over time. The work will recast thinking about violence in the Israeli-Palestinian struggle, but its approach and conclusions have lessons for how we should research political violence more generally.' James Hughes, London School of Economics, UK
'So much of the politics of the Middle East in general and Israel/Palestine in particular have long been bedevilled by constant streams of myths and propaganda. Richard Davis in this excellent book has dispelled many of those myths and exposed the worst of the propaganda. He has achieved it in an impressively dispassionate, objective and well researched way. If the first victim of war is truth, so it is the constant casualty of insurgency and civil strife. By shining bright light into frequently darkened areas Richard Davis has performed an important service for those who seek peace in the Middle East.' Michael Lothian, Chairman Global Strategy Forum and fmr. Shadow Foreign Secretary, UK