Escalation, Timing and Severity of Insurgent and Terrorist Events: Toward a Unified Theory of Future Threats

N. Johnson
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

I present a unified discussion of several recently published results concerning the escalation, timing and severity of violent events in human conflicts and global terrorism, and set them in the wider context of real-world and cyber-based collective violence and illicit activity. I point out how the borders distinguishing between such activities are becoming increasingly blurred in practice -- from insurgency, terrorism, criminal gangs and cyberwars, through to the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings and London riots. I review the robust empirical patterns that have been found, and summarize a minimal mechanistic model which can explain these patterns. I also explain why this mechanistic approach, which is inspired by non-equilibrium statistical physics, fits naturally within the framework of recent ideas within the social science literature concerning analytical sociology. In passing, I flag the fundamental flaws in each of the recent critiques which have surfaced concerning the robustness of these results and the realism of the underlying model mechanisms.
叛乱和恐怖事件的升级、时机和严重性:走向未来威胁的统一理论
我将统一讨论最近发表的关于人类冲突和全球恐怖主义中暴力事件的升级、时间和严重程度的几项结果,并将其置于现实世界和基于网络的集体暴力和非法活动的更广泛背景下。我指出,从叛乱、恐怖主义、犯罪团伙和网络战争,到2011年的阿拉伯之春(Arab Spring)起义和伦敦骚乱,这些活动之间的界限在实践中正变得越来越模糊。我回顾了已经发现的可靠的经验模式,并总结了一个最小的机制模型,可以解释这些模式。我还解释了为什么这种受非平衡统计物理学启发的机械方法自然地符合社会科学文献中有关分析社会学的最新思想框架。顺便提一下,我指出了最近出现的关于这些结果的稳健性和潜在模型机制的现实性的批评中的基本缺陷。
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