Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 2005 |
Title | Subject | Authors |
A genealogy of radical Islam. | Sociology and social work | Wiktorowicz, Quintan |
Al Qaeda as a Dune organization: Toward a typology of Islamic terrorist organizations. | Sociology and social work | Mishal, Shaul, Rosenthal, Maoz |
Al Qaida recruitment trends in Kenya and Tanzania. | Sociology and social work | Rosenau, William |
Anarchist direct actions: A challenge for law enforcement. | Sociology and social work | Borum, Randy, Tilby, Chuck |
Antiterrorism legislation in Australia: A proportionate response to the terrorist threat? | Sociology and social work | Michaelsen, Christopher |
Building the human bomb: The case of the 16 May 2003 attacks in Casablanca. | Sociology and social work | Kalpakian, Jack |
Commentary: The logistics of actionable intelligence leading to 9/11. | Sociology and social work | Derksen, Kevin Michael |
Complexity and counterterrorism: Thinking about biometrics. | Sociology and social work | O'Neil, Patrick H. |
Cyberterrorism: The sum of all fears?. | Sociology and social work | Weimann, Gabriel |
(Gendered) war.(women in war) | Sociology and social work | Nordstrom, Carolyn |
Girls as "weapons of terror" in Northern Uganda and Sierra Leonean rebel fighting forces. | Sociology and social work | McKay, Susan |
In the name of the cause: Women's work in secular and religious terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Ness, Cindy D. |
Islamic terrorism and the question of national liberation, or problems of contemporary Chechen terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Mukhina, Irina |
Kosovo: The triumph of ignorance. | Sociology and social work | O'Shea, Brendan |
Mapping Jihadist terrorism in Spain. | Sociology and social work | Jordan, Javier, Horsburgh, Nicola |
Material support: The United States v. the Lackawanna six. | Sociology and social work | Satkalmi, Ravi |
Measuring success in coping with terrorism: The Israeli case. | Sociology and social work | Morag, Nadav |
Operation Anaconda: Perception meets reality in the hills of Afghanistan. | Sociology and social work | Hastert, Paul L. |
Re-enchanting terrorism: Jihadists as "liminal beings". | Sociology and social work | Saniotis, Arthur |
Tamil Tiger "martyrs": Regenerating divine potency?(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) | Sociology and social work | Roberts, Michael |
Terrorism and the Kenyan public. | Sociology and social work | Otenyo, Eric E., Krause, Volker |
Terrorism as an academic subject after 9/11: Searching the Internet reveals a Stockholm Syndrome trend. | Sociology and social work | Gordon, Avishag |
Terrorist Sanctuaries and Bosnia-Herzegovina: Challenging conventional assumptions. | Sociology and social work | Innes, Michael A. |
The black widows: Chechen women join the fight for independence-and Allah. | Sociology and social work | Nivat, Anne |
The Dutch response to Moluccan terrorism, 1970-1978. | Sociology and social work | Rasser, Martijn |
The leaderless nexus: When crime and terror converge. | Sociology and social work | Dishman, Chris |
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front at 20: State of the revolution. | Sociology and social work | Abuza, Zachary |
The politics of negotiating the terrorist problem in Indonesia. | Sociology and social work | Smith, Anthony L. |
The portrayal of female terrorists in the media: Similar framing patterns in the news coverage of women in politics and in terrorism. | Sociology and social work | Nacos, Brigitte L. |
Urban guerrilla or revolutionary fantasist? Dimitris Koufodinas and the revolutionary Organization 17 November. | Sociology and social work | Kassimeris, George |
What happened to suicide bombings in Israel? Insights from a terror-stuck model. | Sociology and social work | Kaplan, Edward H., Mintz, Alex, Mishal, Shaul, Samban, Claudio |
Women and organized racial terrorism in the United States. | Sociology and social work | Blee, Kathleen M. |
Women fighting in jihad? | Sociology and social work | Cook, David |
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