Corporate security surveillance: an assessment of host country vulnerability to terrorism
In: Advanced Sciences and Technologies for Security Applications
18 Ergebnisse
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In: Advanced Sciences and Technologies for Security Applications
A quantitative analysis that provides new insight into which types of counterterror practices work best and which types perform poorly in particular operational environments and circumstances. For Chasdi, "effectiveness" is defined as the capacity of counterterror practices to work with "stealth"--namely, without eliciting high amounts of related follow-up terrorist assaults. He tackles an analysis of counterterror practice effectiveness based on the type of political system of the country carrying out counterterror offensives and the power level of that country within the international political system. Chasdi furthermore provides qualitative descriptions of national security institutions, stakeholders, and processes to frame his quantitative results in ways that tie those findings to historical and contemporary political developments. --from publisher description
In: The international journal of intelligence, security, and public affairs, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 425-438
ISSN: 2380-100X
In: Armed forces & society, Band 40, Heft 3, S. 476-503
ISSN: 1556-0848
This article is a qualitative analysis of nation-state population 'resiliency' to several spectacular and/or highly symbolic terrorist assaults that were watershed events. It draws heavily from qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) frameworks to isolate and identify the presence of what Goertz calls the 'secondary dimensions' of a 'primary concept' such as resiliency to terrorist assaults. In turn, the presence of those secondary dimensions and their strength presuppose and derive from 'tertiary indicators' that are the basic metrics and concrete manifestations of those secondary dimensions. The nation-states under consideration include the London bombings of 2005, the United States for 9/11, the Madrid bombings of 2004, the first suicide bombings within pre-1967 boundaries of Israel, and the Russian Federation in the case of the 2002 terrorist assault against the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow. The results serve as the basis for the development of a 'resiliency continuum' of nation-states where placement of those countries on the continuum reflect 'nonresilient,' 'semiresilient,' and 'resilient' conditions, themselves defined by the number of secondary dimensions found in each case study. In the process, the analysis illuminates possible interconnections between 'context specific' factors, such as a country's historical experience with terrorism and population characteristics (e.g., education levels, degree of heterogeneity) to the resiliency or nonresiliency condition, and describes possible links between exogenous 'systems factors' such as war and power ranking to the resiliency condition. [Reprinted by permission; copyright Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society/Sage Publications Inc.]
In: Armed forces & society, Band 40, Heft 3, S. 476-503
ISSN: 1556-0848
This article is a qualitative analysis of nation-state population "resiliency" to several spectacular and/or highly symbolic terrorist assaults that were watershed events. It draws heavily from qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) frameworks to isolate and identify the presence of what Goertz calls the "secondary dimensions" of a "primary concept" such as resiliency to terrorist assaults. In turn, the presence of those secondary dimensions and their strength presuppose and derive from "tertiary indicators" that are the basic metrics and concrete manifestations of those secondary dimensions. The nation-states under consideration include the London bombings of 2005, the United States for 9/11, the Madrid bombings of 2004, the first suicide bombings within pre-1967 boundaries of Israel, and the Russian Federation in the case of the 2002 terrorist assault against the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow. The results serve as the basis for the development of a "resiliency continuum" of nation-states where placement of those countries on the continuum reflect "nonresilient," "semiresilient," and "resilient" conditions, themselves defined by the number of secondary dimensions found in each case study. In the process, the analysis illuminates possible interconnections between "context specific" factors, such as a country's historical experience with terrorism and population characteristics (e.g., education levels, degree of heterogeneity) to the resiliency or nonresiliency condition, and describes possible links between exogenous "systems factors" such as war and power ranking to the resiliency condition.
In: Democracy and security, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 225-227
ISSN: 1555-5860
In: The journal of conflict studies: journal of the Centre for Conflict Studies, University of New Brunswick, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 146-172
ISSN: 1198-8614
In: The journal of conflict studies: journal of the Centre for Conflict Studies, University of New Brunswick, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 105-134
ISSN: 1198-8614
In: The journal of conflict studies: journal of the Centre for Conflict Studies, University of New Brunswick, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 168-177
ISSN: 1198-8614
In: Shofar: a quarterly interdisciplinary journal of Jewish studies ; official journal of the Midwest and Western Jewish Studies Associations, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 59-86
ISSN: 1534-5165
In: The international journal of intelligence, security, and public affairs, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 48-62
ISSN: 2380-100X
In: The international journal of intelligence, security, and public affairs, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 103-113
ISSN: 2380-100X
In: The international journal of intelligence, security, and public affairs, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 71-76
ISSN: 2380-100X