European University Institute Library

Militant competition, how terrorists and insurgents advertise with violence and how they can be stopped, Justin Conrad, William Spaniel

Label
Militant competition, how terrorists and insurgents advertise with violence and how they can be stopped, Justin Conrad, William Spaniel
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Militant competition
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Justin Conrad, William Spaniel
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
how terrorists and insurgents advertise with violence and how they can be stopped
Summary
Militant groups often use violence, perversely, to gain attention and resources. In this book, the authors analyze how terrorist and rebel organizations compete with one another to secure funding and supporters. The authors develop a strategic model of competitive violence among militant groups and test the model's implications with statistical analysis and case studies. A series of model extensions allow the authors to incorporate the full range of strategic actors, focusing in particular on government efforts to counter and deter violence. The results indicate that the direct effects of competition are not as clear as they may seem, and interventions to alter competitive incentives may backfire if states are not careful. This is a timely contribution to a growing body of political economy research on militant group fragmentation, rivalry, fratricide and demonstrative violence.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
A formal model of outbidding -- The evidence -- Outbidding, capacity, and government enforcement -- Outbidding as deterrence : endogenous demands in the shadow of group competition -- Cornering the market : counterterrorism in the shadow of group formation
Contributor
Content