全球治理和安全挑战:在全球化世界中减少恐怖主义死亡的跨国途径

Q1 Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Sohidul Islam , Md. Mustaqim Roshid , Reday Chandra Bhowmik , Bablu Kumar Dhar , Mohammed Saiful Islam , Asif Raihan , Fatema Akter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究通过全球治理的视角调查恐怖主义死亡率的跨国驱动因素,重点关注研究期间(1995-2023年)受恐怖主义影响最严重的国家,使用全球恐怖主义指数多年排名而不是单一静态列表动态确定。使用横断面自回归分布滞后(CS-ARDL)模型,它分析了政治稳定、地区冲突、人类发展、军事化、自由民主和政治腐败等关键治理变量如何影响相互关联地区与恐怖主义相关的死亡。该分析考虑了横截面依赖性和异质性,并且在稳健性检查中还纳入了国家和年份固定效应,以减轻遗漏的变量偏差,并捕获跨空间和时间的未观察到的异质性。研究结果表明,传统上被认为是优势的治理因素,如政治稳定、人类发展和民主,在与地区安全动态不一致的情况下,可能会无意中增加恐怖主义的死亡率。相反,军事化和腐败表现出矛盾的效果,而地区冲突则表现出意想不到的负面关联。该研究揭示了几种违反直觉的治理效应,强调了在解释长期弹性时需要谨慎,并强调了未来研究潜在非线性和忽略变量影响的重要性。本研究通过提供一个跨国计量经济学框架来理解可持续发展背景下的恐怖主义死亡率,为全球治理文献做出了独特的贡献。报告最后提出了政策见解,呼吁制定国际协调的治理战略,通过包容性的、面向发展的安全改革,加强制度弹性,促进可持续发展目标16的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Global governance and security challenges: transnational pathways to reducing terrorism mortality in a globalized world
This study investigates the transnational drivers of terrorism mortality through the lens of global governance, focusing on countries most affected by terrorism during the study period (1995–2023), identified dynamically using Global Terrorism Index rankings across multiple years rather than a single static list. Using the Cross-Sectional Autoregressive Distributed Lag (CS-ARDL) model, it analyzes how key governance variables—political stability, regional conflict, human development, militarization, liberal democracy, and political corruption—influence terrorism-related deaths across interconnected regions. The analysis accounts for cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity, and additionally incorporates country and year fixed effects in robustness checks to mitigate omitted variable bias and capture unobserved heterogeneity across space and time. Findings reveal that governance factors traditionally considered strengths, such as political stability, human development, and democracy, may inadvertently escalate terrorism mortality when poorly aligned with regional security dynamics. Conversely, militarization and corruption exhibit paradoxical effects, while regional conflict presents unexpected negative associations. The study uncovers several counterintuitive governance effects, reinforcing the need for caution in interpreting long-run elasticities and highlighting the importance of future research into potential nonlinearities and omitted variable influences. This study uniquely contributes to the global governance literature by offering a transnational econometric framework to understand terrorism mortality within a sustainable development context. It concludes with policy insights calling for internationally coordinated governance strategies that reinforce institutional resilience and promote SDG 16 objectives through inclusive, development-oriented security reforms.
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来源期刊
Research in Globalization
Research in Globalization Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
审稿时长
79 days
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