Countering New(est) Terrorism

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A01=Bruce Oliver Newsome
A01=James W. Stewart
Aarefah Mosavi
Abu Sayyaf
Active Shooter Events
Active Shootings
advanced counterterrorism negotiation methods
al-Qaeda
antiterrorism
Author_Bruce Oliver Newsome
Author_James W. Stewart
Boko Haram
Category=GTU
Category=JKSW1
Category=JKV
Category=JPWL
Category=JW
CBRNE
CNU
communication technology in terrorism
Contemporary Islamic Laws
counterterrorism
crisis negotiation strategies
Detaining Power
dirty bomb
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
FBI's Hostage Rescue Team
Geneva Convention Relative
Global Terrorism Database
HBT
hijacker
hijacking
hostage crisis management
Hostage Rescue Team
IED
incident risk assessment
ISIL
ISIS
Islamic Prescriptions
jihad
law enforcement tactics
lone wolf
Moro Islamic Liberation Front
Official Side
Practical Prescriptions
radicalization
Real World Simulations
Religious Terrorism
Simulated Practices
suicide bomber
Swat Operator
Swat Team
terror
terrorism and violence
terrorism financing
terrorist
terrorist attack
Terrorist Behaviors
terrorist cell
Terrorist Hostage Taking
terrorist network
terrorist plot
terrorist psychology analysis
Terrorist Role Player
Terrorist Side
W. James Stewart
WMD

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367778972
  • Weight: 576g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How should we analyze and assess new terrorist behaviors? What are the particular risks and challenges from new terrorism? Should we negotiate with terrorists, and, if so, how? When should we use force against terrorists? Countering New(est) Terrorism: Hostage-Taking, Kidnapping, and Active Violence—Assessing, Negotiating, and Assaulting improves our knowledge of new terrorist behaviors, and our skills in responding to such attacks.

The term "new terrorism" has been in circulation since the late 90’s. This book analyzes the "newest terrorism" that has emerged in recent years—characterized by increased hostage-taking, kidnapping, and active violence—and develops best practices for countering these emerging threats. Along the way, it challenges fashionable wishful thinking that all terrorists are open to rational negotiation or de-radicalization, that military responses always reflect badly on the official side, and that terrorists are not constrained by their own doctrines.

The new terrorists are dramatically more ideological, murderous, and suicidal. They are generally less reconcilable, less trusting of official negotiators, less likely to release detainees, and more likely to kill detainees. They are less likely to demand ransoms yet more likely to release hostages in cases in which they do demand ransom. They are more informed about the official side’s policies, tactics, techniques, and procedures. They are more likely to use new information and communication technologies against responding agencies and officials. They are more capable fighters—they kill more people despite deploying fewer fighters per hostage. Most disturbing is the fact that they take advantage of free-er societies to access easier targets.

Features:



  • Includes evidence-based definitions and descriptions of political, religious, Jihadi, and new terrorism


  • Presents the first large-n comparison of old and new terrorism, using an original extension of the Global Terrorism Database (GTD), with added codes for each of 10,735 hostage crises and more than 500,000 data points from 1970 through 2016


  • Details a further extension of the GTD covering all terrorist events from 2004 through 2016, roughly 5 million data points.


  • Offers prescriptive advice and visual decision trees on how to negotiate crises, assess the risk of terrorism, and how and when to assault terrorists


  • Reviews official practices, interviews with experienced officials, and real-world simulations of recent terrorist events and attacks


Countering New(est) Terrorism will be of interest to researchers, students enrolled in terrorism and Homeland Security programs, crisis negotiators, and police, security, intelligence, and military authorities tasked with counterterrorism and anti-terrorism efforts.

Bruce Oliver Newsome, PhD, is a lecturer in international relations at the School of Global Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Before teaching, he was a research policy scientist at the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California. He earned his undergraduate degree with honors in war studies from Kings College London, a master's degree in political science from the University of Pennsylvania, and a PhD in international studies from the University of Reading.

W. James Stewart is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, specializing in Middle Eastern studies including the Islamic State, Amman, Jordan, and Erbil, Iraq.

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