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Terrorism, Insurgency, and Homeland Security
CISAC researchers are engaged in scholarship dedicated to exploring the nature and organizational structure of international terrorist organizations, and how best to prevent, mitigate, or counter violence committed by non-state actors.
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Publications
Records 12-22 of 100Sort by Title | Year
- Biotechnology and Bioterrorism: An Unprecedented World
Christopher F. Chyba, Alexander L. Greninger
Survival vol. 46, 2 (2004)
Can Hearts and Minds Be Bought? The Economics of Counterinsurgency in Iraq
Eli Berman, Jacob N. Shapiro, Joseph Felter
Journal of Political Economy vol. 119, 4 (2011)

Coercive Diplomacy and the Response to Terrorism
Martha Crenshaw
The United States and Coercive Diplomacy (2003)

Commitment Trap, The: Why The United States Should Not Use Nuclear Threats to Deter Biological and Chemical Weapons Attacks
Scott D. Sagan
International Security vol. 24, 4 (2000)
- Communicating Nuclear Risk: Informing the Public about the Risks and Realities of Nuclear Terrorism
Tonya L. Putnam
(2002)
Congressional Subcommittee Hearing on Reassessing the Evolving al-Qai'da Threat to the Homeland
Martha Crenshaw
House Subcommittee on Intelligence, Information Sharing and Terrorism Risk Assessment (2009)
Consequences of Counterterrorism, The
Martha Crenshaw
Russell Sage Foundation (2010)
Controversy Dims as Public Opinion Shifts
Amy Zegart
The New York Times (2013)
Correspondence: Responding to Chemical and Biological Threats
Scott D. Sagan
International Security vol. 25, 4 (2001)
Cost of Counterterrorism, The: Power, Politics, and Liberty
Laura K. Donohue
Cambridge University Press (2008)
Criminal Law: Anglo-American Privacy and Surveillance
Laura K. Donohue
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology vol. 96, 3 (2006)



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