TY - BOOK AU - Keefer,Philip AU - Loayza,Norman TI - Terrorism, economic development, and political openness SN - 9780511388484 AV - HV6431 .K38 2008eb U1 - 363.325 22 PY - 2008/// CY - New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Terrorism KW - Economic aspects KW - Political aspects KW - Terrorisme KW - Aspect économique KW - Aspect politique KW - terrorism KW - aat KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Political Freedom & Security KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Economic consequences of terrorism in developed and developing countries : an overview / Todd Sandler and Walter Enders -- The costs of responding to the terrorist threats : the U.S. case / Gregory F. Treverton [and others] -- From (no) butter to guns? : understanding the economic role in transnational terrorism / S. Brock Blomberg and Gregory D. Hess -- The Lexus and the olive branch : globalization, democratization, and terrorism / S. Brock Blomberg and Gregory D. Hess -- Kto kogo? : a cross-country study of the origins and targets of terrorism / Alan B. Krueger and David D. Laitin -- Terrorism and civil war / Nicholas Sambanis -- The political, economic, and organizational sources of terrorism / David D. Laitin and Jacob Shapiro -- Economics and terrorism : what we know, what we should know, and the data we need / Fernanda Llussá and José Tavares N2 - To what extent are terrorism and development related? What are the relative weights of the economic, political, and social aspects of development? What is the development impact of different responses to terrorism? This volume addresses these crucial questions, synthesizing what we know about the development links with terrorism and pointing out what we do not. Contributors to this volume examine the economic and fiscal costs of terrorism and the response to terrorism. They conclude that the economic costs of terrorism in rich countries are low, relative to the economic costs of combating terrorism; both are likely high in poor countries. They also report evidence on how development affects terrorism. This work supports the hypothesis that political development - political openness and the quality of government - is inversely associated with the emergence of terrorist organizations, but not that poverty per se is directly responsible for terrorism UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=221270 ER -