Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 2005 - Abstracts

Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 2005
TitleSubjectAuthors
A genealogy of radical Islam.Sociology and social workWiktorowicz, Quintan
Al Qaeda as a Dune organization: Toward a typology of Islamic terrorist organizations.Sociology and social workMishal, Shaul, Rosenthal, Maoz
Al Qaida recruitment trends in Kenya and Tanzania.Sociology and social workRosenau, William
Anarchist direct actions: A challenge for law enforcement.Sociology and social workBorum, Randy, Tilby, Chuck
Antiterrorism legislation in Australia: A proportionate response to the terrorist threat?Sociology and social workMichaelsen, Christopher
Building the human bomb: The case of the 16 May 2003 attacks in Casablanca.Sociology and social workKalpakian, Jack
Commentary: The logistics of actionable intelligence leading to 9/11.Sociology and social workDerksen, Kevin Michael
Complexity and counterterrorism: Thinking about biometrics.Sociology and social workO'Neil, Patrick H.
Cyberterrorism: The sum of all fears?.Sociology and social workWeimann, Gabriel
(Gendered) war.(women in war)Sociology and social workNordstrom, Carolyn
Girls as "weapons of terror" in Northern Uganda and Sierra Leonean rebel fighting forces.Sociology and social workMcKay, Susan
In the name of the cause: Women's work in secular and religious terrorism.Sociology and social workNess, Cindy D.
Islamic terrorism and the question of national liberation, or problems of contemporary Chechen terrorism.Sociology and social workMukhina, Irina
Kosovo: The triumph of ignorance.Sociology and social workO'Shea, Brendan
Mapping Jihadist terrorism in Spain.Sociology and social workJordan, Javier, Horsburgh, Nicola
Material support: The United States v. the Lackawanna six.Sociology and social workSatkalmi, Ravi
Measuring success in coping with terrorism: The Israeli case.Sociology and social workMorag, Nadav
Operation Anaconda: Perception meets reality in the hills of Afghanistan.Sociology and social workHastert, Paul L.
Re-enchanting terrorism: Jihadists as "liminal beings".Sociology and social workSaniotis, Arthur
Tamil Tiger "martyrs": Regenerating divine potency?(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam)Sociology and social workRoberts, Michael
Terrorism and the Kenyan public.Sociology and social workOtenyo, Eric E., Krause, Volker
Terrorism as an academic subject after 9/11: Searching the Internet reveals a Stockholm Syndrome trend.Sociology and social workGordon, Avishag
Terrorist Sanctuaries and Bosnia-Herzegovina: Challenging conventional assumptions.Sociology and social workInnes, Michael A.
The black widows: Chechen women join the fight for independence-and Allah.Sociology and social workNivat, Anne
The Dutch response to Moluccan terrorism, 1970-1978.Sociology and social workRasser, Martijn
The leaderless nexus: When crime and terror converge.Sociology and social workDishman, Chris
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front at 20: State of the revolution.Sociology and social workAbuza, Zachary
The politics of negotiating the terrorist problem in Indonesia.Sociology and social workSmith, 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 workNacos, Brigitte L.
Urban guerrilla or revolutionary fantasist? Dimitris Koufodinas and the revolutionary Organization 17 November.Sociology and social workKassimeris, George
What happened to suicide bombings in Israel? Insights from a terror-stuck model.Sociology and social workKaplan, Edward H., Mintz, Alex, Mishal, Shaul, Samban, Claudio
Women and organized racial terrorism in the United States.Sociology and social workBlee, Kathleen M.
Women fighting in jihad?Sociology and social workCook, David
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.