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Terörizm paradoksu ve Türkiye
The Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) as Criminal Syndicate: Funding Terrorism through Organized Crime, A Case Study
In: Studies in conflict and terrorism, Band 30, Heft 10, S. 901-920
ISSN: 1521-0731
The Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) as Criminal Syndicate: Funding Terrorism through Organized Crime, A Case Study
In: Studies in conflict & terrorism, Band 30, Heft 10, S. 901-920
ISSN: 1057-610X
Terörün sosyal psikolojisi
In: Polis Akademisi yayınları
In: Terörizm ve sınıraşan suçlar serisi 1
Terrorism; social psychology; Turkey
Whom do they recruit?: Profiling and recruitment in the PKK/KCK
In: Studies in conflict & terrorism, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 322-347
ISSN: 1057-610X
World Affairs Online
Cooperative bargaining to internalise open access externalities: Implications of the American fisheries act
The United States Congress recently passed a law that creates an alternative to individual transferable quota (ITQ) management. The American Fisheries Act promises the ability to rationalise one of the world's largest fisheries, the North Pacific pollock fishery, without the overt appearance of allocating permanent property rights to a public resource. The Act enabled pollock fishers to form cooperative bargaining units that are guaranteed a fixed share of the total allowable catch providing they deliver to historic processors. This paper explores the political economy of policy change and the innovative use of fishery cooperatives to advance voluntary decapitilisation and rationalisation that Congress intended to benefit both vessels and processors. Game theory offers insights into the likelihood of achieving congressional intent. It is argued that the Act introduces a new market failure while attempting to rid the fishery of the open access externality. It is further argued that outcomes of voluntary agreements, whether targeting environmental concerns or natural resource management, are sensitive to market structure and institutional contexts.
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Whom Do They Recruit?: Profiling and Recruitment in the PKK/KCK
In: Studies in conflict and terrorism, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 322-347
ISSN: 1521-0731
Whom Do They Recruit?: Profiling and Recruitment in the PKK/KCK
In: Studies in conflict and terrorism, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 322-347
ISSN: 1521-0731
Terrorist organizations use a proactive strategy in identifying potential candidates for recruitment. In such a strategy, miscellaneous vulnerabilities, grievances, and feeling destitute, inter alia, render certain individuals perfect candidates for terrorist organizations. It is therefore crucial to have an integrative approach to understand the interplay between the profiles of terrorists and their reasons to join terrorist groups on the one hand and processes of recruitment on the other. Proceeding from such a fulcrum, this article provides a general profile of the Kurdistan Workers' Party [PKK]/Kurdistan Communities Union [KCK] members and various recruitment techniques used by this group. To this end, records of 2,270 group members were content analyzed, in addition to face-to-face interviews with 42 group members and a range of individuals from public and private institutions. Our findings suggest that a variety of individual and organizational factors influence individual paths toward terrorism. Adapted from the source document.
Whom Do They Recruit?: Profiling and Recruitment in the PKK/KCK
In: Studies in conflict & terrorism, Band 37, Heft 4, S. 322-347
ISSN: 1057-610X