This podcast is on Conflict and Terrorism Studies. It discusses and reviews articles and books published by researchers in this Political Science and International Relations subdiscipline.
All content for Conflict & Terrorism Studies with Wisdom is the property of Wisdom Iyekekpolo and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This podcast is on Conflict and Terrorism Studies. It discusses and reviews articles and books published by researchers in this Political Science and International Relations subdiscipline.
When to Take Credit for Terrorism? A Cross-National Examination of Claims and Attributions - Dr Erin M. Kearns
Conflict & Terrorism Studies with Wisdom
17 minutes 19 seconds
4 years ago
When to Take Credit for Terrorism? A Cross-National Examination of Claims and Attributions - Dr Erin M. Kearns
Please subscribe to your preferred podcast platform; we are available on Apple, Google, Spotify and 6 others. https://anchor.fm/wisdom-iyekekpolo
Also subscribe and comment on our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiBmLNnt0FcYeLFg9_E9z4w
Contact: w.iyekekpolo@auckland.ac.nz
ABSTRACT
Rationalist research expects that groups claim credit for terrorism. Yet, the vast majority of attacks are not claimed. Of the unclaimed attacks, about half are attributed to a specific group. What factors impact claiming decisions? While extant literature largely treats claiming as binary—either claimed or not—the present study disaggregates claiming decisions further to also consider attacks with attributions of credit but no claim, using data from 160 countries between 1998 and 2016. Both attack-level and situational factors impact claiming decisions. Disaggregating claiming behavior shows meaningful differences. Specifically, competitive environments and suicide attacks increase claims but not attributions. Higher fatalities in general increase both claims and attributions, but when the target is civilian attributions decrease with a high body count whereas claims increase. Further, while the directional impact of other variables is the same, the magnitude of their effects vary between claims and attributions. Results are robust across modeling specifications. Findings demonstrate that our understanding of claiming behaviors is limited when claiming is treated as dichotomous. This study provides further insight into factors that impact claiming decisions for terrorism. Results can address data issues in academic research and inform counterterrorism responses.
Conflict & Terrorism Studies with Wisdom
This podcast is on Conflict and Terrorism Studies. It discusses and reviews articles and books published by researchers in this Political Science and International Relations subdiscipline.