Terrorism and hostage negotiations
In: Westview special studies in national and international terrorism
38 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Westview special studies in national and international terrorism
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 189-199
ISSN: 1468-5973
Although social scientists have sought to understand riots in terms of social structure, few causal explanations have withstood the tests of ongoing empirical examination. In America, presidential commissions sought to put the black urban riots of the mid‐sixties in a similar context. Despite the laudable attempts at deriving benign policy implications from such explanations, the commissions' explanations were no better than the social science of the time. Understanding the causal basis of riots has been elusive, but our understanding of riots as problems of crisis management has been far more reachable. A comparison of two Los Angeles riots, Watts 1965, and the Rodney King riots of 1992, shows that the intensity, spread and duration of the riots were a function of crisis paralysis. We might not know, in any scientific sense, what causes riots but we appear to know a great deal about the consequences of not appropriately preparing for or managing riots. These are the lessons of both Los Angeles riots.
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 189-199
ISSN: 0966-0879
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 189-199
ISSN: 0966-0879
In: International journal of intelligence and counterintelligence, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 88-102
ISSN: 1521-0561
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 19-29
ISSN: 1468-5973
Some thirty years ago, the Kerner Commission report explained the outbursts of urban violence in America's Black ghettos as caused by Black deprivation wrought by white racism. In its rendition of the Black experience through four hundred years of American racism and its description of the conditions in the urban ghettos of the 1960s, the report is worthy of the acclaim it has received. In its analysis of the causal factors that led to the riots, the report attempts to appeal to intuition but falls far short of making a case on the basis of any remote standard of causal analysis. Indeed, the report strikingly resembles the academic studies that have invoked relative and absolute deprivation theories to explain the American urban riots of the 1960s and which have repeatedly collapsed under the scrutiny of basic considerations of social science methodology.The causes of riots might as aptly fall into situational explanations, including the pattern of police response, as they fall into theoretical ones. While social scientists debate such issues, policy makers have had to respond to the realities of riots, both in terms of causes and effects.Surprisingly, many policy makers, irrespective of their own ideologies and notions of causes, when dealing with America's urban riots, appear to have come to the same general conclusions about the policies that need to be implemented to prevent future racial crises. Looking at these responses, as well as both the idiosyncratic and common attributes of riots, this paper suggests reconceptualizing and rethinking the nature of riots so as to move toward a better understanding of this type of racial crisis.
In: Journal of contingencies and crisis management, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 19-29
ISSN: 0966-0879
In: International journal of intelligence and counterintelligence, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 257-268
ISSN: 1521-0561
In: International journal of intelligence and counterintelligence, Band 10, S. 257-268
ISSN: 0885-0607
Examines newspaper articles written by reporter Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News, which accused the CIA of being involved with Nicaraguan Contra drug traffickers who sold cocaine to inner city Blacks; role of radio talk-show hosts and the Internet.
In: Terrorism and political violence, Band 6, Heft 4, S. 435-439
ISSN: 1556-1836
In: Politics, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 22-28
ISSN: 1467-9256
In: Terrorism and political violence, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 305-323
ISSN: 1556-1836
In: Conflict quarterly, Band 5, S. 5-16
ISSN: 0227-1311
Western Europe. Includes recent actions directed at NATO.
In: Terrorism, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 125-146