International audienceTough anti-terrorism policies are often defended by focusing on a fixed minority of the population who prefer violent outcomes, and arguing that toughness reduces the risk of terrorism from this group. This reasoning implicitly assumes that tough policies do not increase the group of 'potential terrorists', i.e., of people with violent preferences. Preferences and their level of violence are treated as stable, exogenously fixed features. To avoid this unrealistic assumption, I formulate a model in which policies can 'brutalise' or 'appease' someone's personality, i.e., his preferences. This follows the endogenous preferences approach, popular elsewhere in political science and economics. I formally decompose the effect...
This article analyzes the determinants of terrorism saliency in public opinion. It is usually assume...
In this Policy Briefing, we address two important questions. We look at the drivers of concern about...
What makes ordinary people demand that politicians address international terrorism? Using a cross-na...
International audienceTough anti-terrorism policies are often defended by focusing on a fixed minori...
Terrorism presents a fundamental paradox - groups that use terrorism are vastly weaker in terms of t...
In this paper, I present and discuss a method for modelling an important trade-off faced by terroris...
This Article analyzes the psycho-social causes of terrorism, conceptual failures of deterrence, and ...
Although anti-terrorism policy should be based on a normative treatment of risk that incorporates li...
Terrorists are poor candidates for deterrence. They are difficult to deter because they are motivate...
Terrorism in general, and suicidal terrorism in particular, is popularly seen as “irrational,” but m...
Although anti-terrorism policy should be based on a normative treatment of risk that incorporates li...
Existing literature does not explain why protracted terror-counterterror conflicts are sometimes cha...
We develop a game-theoretic analysis of terrorism that examines the interaction between a terrorist ...
This chapter argues that terrorist tactics and strategy challenge all 'legitimate' politics and that...
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between level of violence in terrorist atta...
This article analyzes the determinants of terrorism saliency in public opinion. It is usually assume...
In this Policy Briefing, we address two important questions. We look at the drivers of concern about...
What makes ordinary people demand that politicians address international terrorism? Using a cross-na...
International audienceTough anti-terrorism policies are often defended by focusing on a fixed minori...
Terrorism presents a fundamental paradox - groups that use terrorism are vastly weaker in terms of t...
In this paper, I present and discuss a method for modelling an important trade-off faced by terroris...
This Article analyzes the psycho-social causes of terrorism, conceptual failures of deterrence, and ...
Although anti-terrorism policy should be based on a normative treatment of risk that incorporates li...
Terrorists are poor candidates for deterrence. They are difficult to deter because they are motivate...
Terrorism in general, and suicidal terrorism in particular, is popularly seen as “irrational,” but m...
Although anti-terrorism policy should be based on a normative treatment of risk that incorporates li...
Existing literature does not explain why protracted terror-counterterror conflicts are sometimes cha...
We develop a game-theoretic analysis of terrorism that examines the interaction between a terrorist ...
This chapter argues that terrorist tactics and strategy challenge all 'legitimate' politics and that...
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between level of violence in terrorist atta...
This article analyzes the determinants of terrorism saliency in public opinion. It is usually assume...
In this Policy Briefing, we address two important questions. We look at the drivers of concern about...
What makes ordinary people demand that politicians address international terrorism? Using a cross-na...