Assessing the War on Terror

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Ahmad Shah Abdali
Al Nusra Front
al-Qaeda
Anwar Al Awlaki
Anwar Said al-Haidari
Audrey Kurth Cronin
Bouthaina Shaaban
Casey Douglas Carr
Category=GTU
Category=JPS
Category=JPWL
Charles P. Webel
comparative global war on terror perspectives
counterterrorism strategies
Drone Strikes
drone warfare ethics
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Evil Scourge
foreign policy
Free Syrian Army
Global War on Terror
Inclusive Peace Process
insurgency negotiation methods
International Humanitarian Law
Ioannis Tellidis
ISIS
ISIS Fighter
ISIS's Ideology
ISIS’s Ideology
Johan Galtung
John A. Arnaldi
Laurie Calhoun
Lethal Drones
Liberal Peace
Liberal Peacebuilding
Liberal Peacebuilding Approach
Mark Tomass
Middle East
Middle East conflict analysis
Middle Eastern Perspectives
Muslim World
Noam Chomsky
non-Western perspectives
Oliver P. Richmond
Orthodox Terrorism
psychosocial impact terrorism
Salafi Jihadi Groups
Salah Abdeslam
Sarton Weinraub
Scott Atran
security studies research
Sher Mohammed Khan
Syria
Terrorist Groups
UN
United States
Vice Versa
William A. Cohn
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138204560
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Feb 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume is a collection of articles that critically examine the efficacy, ethics, and impact of the War on Terror as it has evolved since 9/11.

During the decade and a half of the Global War on Terror (GWOT), numerous books have considered the political, psychosocial, and economic impacts of terrorism. However, there has been little systematic effort to examine the effectiveness of the GWOT in achieving its goals. Furthermore, there is virtually nothing that presents a comparative analysis of the GWOT by the people most directly affected by it—citizens and scholars from conflict zones in the Middle East. There is, therefore, great need for a book that analyzes the strategies, tactics, and outcomes of the GWOT and that also presents facts and ideas that are missing or underrepresented in the dominant public narratives. The contributions in this volume were chosen to specifically address this need. In doing so, it uniquely provides not only Western perspectives of the GWOT, but also importantly includes perspectives from the Middle East and those most directly affected by it, including contributions from scholars and policy makers. Overall, the contributions demonstrate how views differ based on geographical location, and how views have changed during the course of the still-evolving War on Terror.

The book will be of much interest to students and scholars of terrorism and counter-terrorism, foreign policy, Middle Eastern politics, security studies and IR, as well as policy makers.

Charles Webel is the Delp-Wilkinson Chair and Professor of Peace Studies at Chapman University, USA, and Professor of International Economic Relations at the University of New York in Prague, Czech Republic. He is author/editor of eights books, including Terror, Terrorism, and the Human Condition (2007) and Peace and Conflict Studies, 3rd edition (with D. Barash, 2014).

Mark Tomass is an economist and instructor at Harvard University, USA, and author of The Religious Roots of the Syrian Conflict: The Remaking of the Fertile Crescent (2016).

Contributors: Noam Chomsky, Oliver Richmond, Ioannis Tellidis, Sarton Weinraub, Buthaina Shaaban, Anwar Said al-Haidari, Sher M. Khan, John Arnaldi, William Cohn, Laurie Calhoun, Scott Atran, Johan Galtung, Casey Douglas Carr and Audrey Kurth Cronin.