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Has the Global War on Terror Changed the Terrorist Threat? A Time-Series Intervention Analysis
S-CAR Journal Article
Ivan Sascha Sheehan
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Assistant Professor and Director of the M.S. in Negotiations and Conflict Management Program at the University of Baltimore
Qualification:
Ph.D. Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University
M.S. Conflict Analysis and Resolultion, George Mason University
Awards and Honor:
Has the Global War on Terror Changed the Terrorist Threat? A Time-Series Intervention Analysis
Abstract
Whether the Global War on Terror (GWOT) has changed the terrorist threat is a matter of controversy. This study, using transnational terrorism events data from 1993 through 2004, employs a time-series approach to investigate the extent to which the onset of the GWOT (beginning with the invasion of Afghanistan) and related events (the invasion of Iraq, the capture of Saddam Hussein, and the release of photos from Abu Ghraib) are associated with changes in transnational terrorist activity, its frequency, dispersion, lethality, type of attack, and type of victim of transnational terrorist incidents.
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