Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 2003 |
Title | Subject | Authors |
Al Qaeda: a different diagnosis. | Sociology and social work | Smith, Michael L.R., Raufer, Xavier, Weeding, Mark |
Al Qeada, trends in terrorism, and future potentialities: an assessment. | Sociology and social work | Hoffman, Bruce, Smith, Michael L.R. |
Applying lessons from medical management of conventional terror to responding to weapons of mass destruction terror: the experience of a tertiary university hospital. | Sociology and social work | Shapira, Shmuel C.; Mor-Yosef, Shlomo |
Beyond horror: terrorist atrocity and the search for understanding - the case of the Shankill bombing. | Sociology and social work | Silke, Andrew |
Breaking Al Qaeda cells: a mathematical analysis of counterterrorism operations (a guide for risk assessment and decision making). | Sociology and social work | Smith, Michael L.R., Weeding, Mark, Farley, Jonathan David |
Controlling computer network operations. | Sociology and social work | Rathmell, Andrew |
Cross-regional trends in female terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Cunningham, Karla J. |
Defining religious terrorism: a causal and anthological profile. | Sociology and social work | Schbley, Ayla |
Die and let die: exploring links between suicide terrorism and terrorist use of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear weapons. | Sociology and social work | Dolnik, Adam |
Iran, the United States, and the war on terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Bahgat, Gawdat |
Islam and attitudes toward U.S. policy in the Middle East: evidence from survey research in Lebanon. | Sociology and social work | Haddad, Simon |
Looking for the pattern: Al Qaeda in Southeast Asia-the genealogy of a terror network. | Sociology and social work | Jones, David Martin, Smith, Michael L.R., Weeding, Mark |
Non-military security in the wider Middle East. | Sociology and social work | Chalk, Peter |
"One size fits all": Israel, intelligence, and the 'al-Aqsa Intifada'. | Sociology and social work | Jones, Clive |
Osama bin Laden and Guerrilla War. | Sociology and social work | Chipman, Don D. |
Palestinian suicide terrorism in the second Intifada: motivations and organizational aspects. | Sociology and social work | Moghadam, Assaf |
Realizing hegemony? Symbolic terrorism and the roots of conflict. | Sociology and social work | Richmond, Oliver P. |
Regions of risk: western discourses on terrorism and the significance of Islam . | Sociology and social work | Bankoff, Greg, Smith, Michael L.R. |
Saddam Hussein: political psychological profiling results relevant to his possession, use, and possible transfer of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to terrorist groups. | Sociology and social work | Shaw, Eric D. |
The Almajiri heritage and the threat of non-state terrorism in Northern Nigeria - lessons from Central Asia and Pakistan. | Sociology and social work | Awofeso, Niyi; Ritchie, Jan; Degeling, Pieter |
The myth of Ulsterization in British security policy in Northern Ireland. | Sociology and social work | Neumann, Peter R. |
The struggle for an independent Aceh: the ideology, capacity, and strategy of GAM.(Gerakan Aceh Merdeka) | Sociology and social work | Schulze, Kirsten E. |
The terrorist calculus behind 9-11: a model for future terrorism?. | Sociology and social work | Nacos, Brigitte L. |
Treachery and deceit: parallels in tribal and terrorist warfare? | Sociology and social work | Wadley, Reed L. |
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