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Terrorism Risk, Resilience and Volatility: A Comparison of Terrorism Patterns in Three Southeast Asian Countries

NCJ Number
245796
Journal
Journal of Quantitative Criminology Volume: 29 Issue: 2 Dated: June 2013 Pages: 295-320
Author(s)
Gentry White; Michael D. Porter; Lorraine Mazerolle
Date Published
June 2013
Length
26 pages
Annotation
This article explores patterns of terrorist activity over the period from 2000 through 2010 across three target countries: Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand.
Abstract
The authors use self-exciting point process models to create interpretable and replicable metrics for three key terrorism concepts: risk, resilience and volatility, as defined in the context of terrorist activity. Analysis of the data shows significant and important differences in the risk, volatility and resilience metrics over time across the three countries. For the three countries analyzed, the authors show that risk varied on a scale from 0.005 to 1.61 expected terrorist attacks per day, volatility ranged from 0.820 to 0.994 additional attacks caused by each attack, and resilience, as measured by the number of days until risk subsides to a pre-attack level, ranged from 19 to 39 days. The authors found that of the three countries, Indonesia had the lowest average risk and volatility, and the highest level of resilience, indicative of the relatively sporadic nature of terrorist activity in Indonesia. The high terrorism risk and low resilience in the Philippines was a function of the more intense, less clustered pattern of terrorism than what was evident in Indonesia. Mathematical models hold great promise for creating replicable, reliable and interpretable metrics to key terrorism concepts such as risk, resilience and volatility. (Published Abstract)