Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 2001 |
Title | Subject | Authors |
Analytic models and policy prescription: understanding recent innovation in U.S. counterterrorism. | Sociology and social work | Falkenrath, Richard |
Aum Shinrikyo's biological weapons program: why did it fail? | Sociology and social work | Rosenau, William |
Camp David and the 'Al-Aqsa Intifada': an assessment of the state of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, July-December 2000. | Sociology and social work | Schulze, Kirsten E. |
Change and continuity in terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Hoffman, Bruce |
Comparing motive and outcomes of mass casualty terrorism involving conventional and unconventional weapons. | Sociology and social work | Parachini, John V. |
Counterterrorism policy and the political process. | Sociology and social work | Crenshaw, Martha |
Cults, violence and religious terrorism: An international perspective. | Sociology and social work | Mayer, Jean-Francois |
Current trends in agroterrorism: Antilivestock, anticrop, and antisoil bioagricultural terrorism and their potential impact on food security. | Sociology and social work | Foxell, Joseph W., Jr. |
Ideological mutation and millennial belief in the American neo-Nazi movement. | Sociology and social work | Whitsel, Brad |
Revenge without rules: on the renaissance of an archaic motif of violence. | Sociology and social work | Waldermann, Peter |
Separatism and Southeast Asia: the Islamic factor in southern Thailand, Mindanao, and Aceh. | Sociology and social work | Chalk, Peter |
Struggling with the challenges of right-wing extremism and terrorism within democratic boundaries: A comparative analysis. | Sociology and social work | Pedahzur, Ami |
Talking to "terrorists": towards an independent analytical framework for the study of violent substate activism. | Sociology and social work | Brannan, David W., Esler, Philip F., Strindberg, N.T. Anders |
Technology acquisition by terrorist groups: threat assessment informed by lessons from private sector technology adoption. | Sociology and social work | Jackson, Brian A. |
Terrorism and beyond: A 21st century perspective. | Sociology and social work | Jenkins, Brian Michael |
Terrorism and counterterrorism: An international perspective. | Sociology and social work | Veness, David |
Terrorism, crime, and transformation. | Sociology and social work | Dishman, Chris |
Terrorist victimization: prevention, control, and recovery. | Sociology and social work | Kratcoski, Peter C. |
The bin Laden trial: what did we learn?(Osama bin Laden)(1993 World Trade Center bombing) | Sociology and social work | Bergen, Peter |
The bombing of Omagh, 15 August 1998: the bombers, their tactics, strategy, and purpose behind the incident.(Northern Ireland) | Sociology and social work | Dingley, James |
The changing security agenda in Southeast Asia: globalization, new terror, and the delusions of regionalism. | Sociology and social work | Jones, David M., Smith, Mike L. |
The East Timor referendum crisis and its impact on Indonesian politics. | Sociology and social work | Schulze, Kirsten E. |
The modernization in Irish republican thinking toward the utility of violence. | Sociology and social work | Alonso, Rogelio |
The transformation of Israel's extreme right.(right-wing extremism and politics in Israel) | Sociology and social work | Pedahzur, Ami |
Transnational organized crime: A European perspective.(Statistical Data Included) | Sociology and social work | Jamieson, Alison |
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