Description
The book is organized to assist readers in finding the topics that interest them the most. What do we really know about the contributing causes of terrorism? Are all forms of terrorism created equal, or are there important differences in terrorisms that one must know about to customize effective counter-strategies? Does poverty cause terrorism? Are terrorists typically crazy, vengeful, misled, or simply making an entirely sensible choice? Why would people blow themselves (and others) up? Is the “war on terrorism” even a useful idea? Is it being fought wisely, or are much better ideas staring policy makers in the face? Do leaders of targeted nations wilfully neglect the best solutions? Most of the lessons in this book concern the basic human ingredients that combust to produce violent extremism. Thus – regardless of the mutations that occur in substate terrorism – the timeless scholarship here will hopefully be somewhat helpful even to our grandchildren.
Chapter
Tyranny of Data: Going Beyond Theories
Have Motivations for Terrorism Changed?
The Psychology of Terrorism: Toward a Scientific Approach
The Psychology of Terrorism: "Syndrome" Versus "Tool" Perspectives
Understanding Terrorism: Old Assumptions, New Assertions, and Challenges for Research
Crusades and Jihads: An Existential Psychological Perspective on the Psychology of Terrorism and Political Extremism
Identifying Cross-National Global Terrorist Hot Spots
Economic Methods and the Study of Terrorism: An Evaluation
Who Supports Terrorism and Why?
The Radical Community: A Comparative Analysis of the Social Background of ETA, IRA, and Hezbollah
Terrorists and the Societies from Which They Come
Research Note: Who Supports Terrorism? Evidence from Fourteen Muslim Countries
Individual Motivations for Joining Terrorist Organizations:A Comparative Qualitative Study on Members of ETA and IRA
Adolescents' Willingness to Engage in Political Conflict: Lessons from the Gaza Strip
Sympathy for Terrorism: Possible Interaction Between Social, Emotional, and Neuroendocrine Risk Factors
Terrorist Behavior in Hostage Taking: Policy Issues and Research Directions
The Empirical Study of the Terrorist Threat
Religion and Culture in the Arab World: Evidence of Links to Political Violence
Defusing Human Bombs: Understanding Suicide Terrorism
Moral Agents, Immoral Violence: Mechanisms of Moral Disengagement in Palestinian Suicide Terrorism
The Palestinian Human Bombers
A Multi-Causal Analysis of the Genesis of Suicide Terrorism: The Chechen Case
What Should We Do? Psychologically Informed Approaches to Reducing the Threat of Substate Terrorism
Possible Causes and Motives of Nuclear and Radiological Terrorism in the Light of Empirical Data on Smuggling Incidents of Nuclear Materials
Countering Islamist Militancy: An Epidemiologic Approach
Suicide Terrorism: Modeling Group Dynamics and Individual Behavior
Reducing the Threat of Substate Terrorism: Interventions to Reduce the Efficacy of Committed Terrorists
Preventing Substate Terrorist Groups from Recruiting and Retaining Young Members
Conflict Prevention and Conflict Resolution: Recommendations for Diplomatic, Political, Military, Economic, Legal and Human Rights Policies Likely to Prevent or Resolve Tension Provoking Conflict
Perspectives, Comments and Recommendations
Ten Rules for Preventing and Combating Terrorism