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Terrorism, Insurgency, and Homeland Security
CISAC researchers are engaged in scholarship dedicated to exploring the nature and organizational structure of international terrorist organizations, and how best to prevent, mitigate, or counter violence committed by non-state actors.
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Publications
Records 23-33 of 104Sort by Year | Title
Eyes on Spies: Congress and the United States Intelligence Community
Amy Zegart
Hoover Institution Press (2011)
The Biggest Threat to Western Values
Tarak Barkawi
Al-Jazeera (English) (2011)

- Informal Networks, Economic Livelihoods and the Politics of Social Welfare: Understanding the Political And Humanitarian Consequences of the War on Terrorist Finance
Khalid Medani
The UCLA Journal of Islamic and Near Eastern Law vol. 10 (2011)
Strife and Secession in Sudan
Khalid Medani
Journal of Democracy vol. 22, 3 (2011)
Office of the Director of National Intelligence: Promising Start Despite Ambiguity, Ambivalence, and Animosity
Thomas Fingar, Roger Z. George, Harvey Rishikof
Georgetown University Press in "The National Security Enterprise: Navigating the Labyrinth" (2011)
The Next Catastrophe: Reducing Our Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters
Charles Perrow
Princeton University Press (Third printing and first paperback printing) (2011)
Microbial threat lists: obstacles in the quest for biosecurity?
Arturo Casadevall, David Relman
Nature Reviews Microbiology vol. 8, 2 (2010)

Disciplining an Unruly Field: Terrorism Experts and Theories of Scientific/Intellectual Production
Lisa Stampnitzky
Qualitative Sociology vol. 34, 1 (2010)
Analyzing Evacuation Versus Shelter-in-Place Strategies After a Terrorist Nuclear Detonation
Lawrence M. Wein, Youngsoo Choi, Sylvie Denuit
Risk Analysis vol. 30 (2010)
Is this Paper Dangerous? Balancing Secrecy and Openness in Counterterrorism
Jacob N. Shapiro, David A. Siegel
Security Studies vol. 19, 1 (2010)
Consequences of Counterterrorism, The
Martha Crenshaw
Russell Sage Foundation (2010)



