Name your price: Economic compensation and suicide terrorism
Author(s) -
R. H. and Thomas R. Hinton Samuel,
Sobek David
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of peace and development studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2141-6621
DOI - 10.5897/ijpds2016.0276
Subject(s) - terrorism , compensation (psychology) , cash , irrational number , ideology , attractiveness , politics , economics , political economy , political science , criminology , social psychology , psychology , law , finance , geometry , mathematics , psychoanalysis
Suicide terrorism remains a difficult action to rationally explain. Scholars often rely on ideological or religious motivations to explain these seemingly irrational actions. While it seems clear that non-economic motives matter, it is also the case that economic compensation can incentivize suicide terrorism in ways that allow for more robust suicide terrorism campaigns. As such, we would expect that organizations providing monetary incentives generate more attacks. In addition, the general economic environment plays into this as poor economic conditions increase the attractiveness of monetary compensation. To test our arguments, we conduct a series of statistical analyses looking at seven terrorist organizations that engaged in suicide terrorism from 2000 through 2008 and find that both high levels of economic compensation and poor economic conditions are correlated with a greater number of suicide terrorist attacks.
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