PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall :40am-10:55am, Dewey Alexander Lee

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Instructor: Email: alexander.mark.lee@rochester.edu Office: Harkness Hall 327 Office Hours: Tuesday 11:30-2 PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 9:40am-10:55am, Dewey 2162 Alexander Lee Course Goals: Over the past century, terrorism has become a common feature of world politics, enabling small groups of individuals to have a disproportionate influence on the politics of both developed and underdeveloped countries. This course explores some of the fundamental questions of terrorism: Why individuals join terrorist groups, why terrorist groups adopt certain tactics such as suicide bombing, how terrorist groups organize themselves, and what counterterrorism strategies are effective? It aims to develop critical thinking about these basic questions, knowledge of the details of a few selected cases, and give students experience constructing social-scientific arguments. Textbooks: Hoffman, Bruce (2006) Inside Terrorism (2 nd ed). New York: Columbia University Press. Grading: Class Participation 20% Midterm 20% Data Exercise 30% Final 30% Course Policies: Unexcused late work will be penalized a whole letter grade, and an additional letter grade for every additional 24 hours of lateness. Plagiarism or cheating will be treated seriously and reported to the Board of Academic Honesty. Course Requirements: Attendance and Reading: Students will be required attend discussion sections on six specific regularly scheduled class dates, generally Thursdays. On these Thursdays (indicated in the syllabus) students should come prepared to discuss the readings for that week and the previous week. Students will be asked to sign up for specific section locations on the first day of class Midterm: A midterm exam on October 17 th will ask students to identify and explain key concepts from the first six (6) weeks of the course. Final: A final exam will ask students to identify and explain key concepts from the last eight (8) weeks of the course, and write essays on themes covering the whole of the course material. Data Exercise: Students will be expected to produce an essay of between 1500 and 2000 words that identifies a questions or puzzle concerning terrorism, develops a hypothesis about its solution, relates PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 1

the questions and answer to the course readings, and provides statistical evidence to support the hypothesis. The statistical evidence should be drawn from one of three data sources: The Global Terrorism Database: http://www.start.umd.edu/gtd/ The Lee Dataset of Bengali Nationalists: Blackboard Server Gallup Survey of International Reactions to the Death of Osama Bin Laden: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/icpsr/studies/33503 Readings Weeks 1: Definitions Introduction: September 2 nd, Introduction to Statistics: September 4 th Weeks 2: Introduction and Definitions Introduction to Data Sources: September 9 th, Lecture: September 11 th Hoffman, Bruce (2006). Defining Terrorism (Chapter 1). In Inside Terrorism (2 nd ed). New York: Columbia University Press, 1-41. Tilly, Charles (2004). Terror, Terrorism, Terrorists. Sociological Theory 22(1): 5-13. Week 3: The History of Terrorism Lecture: September 16 th, September 18 th Hoffman, Bruce (2006) Inside Terrorism, 2nd ed. New York: Columbia University Press, 63-80. 257-295 David C. Rapoport, The Four Waves of Modern Terrorism, in Audrey Kurth Cronin and James M. Ludes, Eds., Attacking Terrorism: Elements of a Grand Strategy, pp. 46-73. Burleigh, Michael. Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism. HarperCollins, 2009. P. 27-59 Week 4: The Strategies of Terrorist Groups Lecture: September 23 rd, Section: September 25 th Crenshaw, Martha (1998). The Logic of Terrorism: Terrorist behavior as a product of strategic choice. (Chapter 1). In Walter Reich, Ed. Origins of Terrorism: Psychologies, Ideologies, Theologies, States of Mind (2nd ed.), 7-24. Kydd, Andrew and Barbara Walter (2006). The Strategies of Terrorism. International Security 31(1): 49-80. PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 2

Week 5: The Collective Causes of Terrorism Lecture: September 30 th, Section: October 2 nd Li, Quan. "Does democracy promote or reduce transnational terrorist incidents?." Journal of Conflict Resolution 49.2 (2005): 278-297. Drakos, Konstantinos, and Andreas Gofas. "The Devil You Know but Are Afraid to Face Underreporting Bias and its Distorting Effects on the Study of Terrorism." Journal of Conflict Resolution 50.5 (2006): 714-735. Piazza, James A. "Incubators of Terror: Do Failed and Failing States Promote Transnational Terrorism?." International Studies Quarterly 52.3 (2008): 469-488. Week 6: The Red Army Faction Lecture: October 7 th, October 9 th [Cross Tab for Data Exercise Due] P.221-267. Hans Josef Horchem,, "The Lost Revolution of West Germany's Terrorists, Terrorism and Political Violence, vol. 1, no. 3, July 1989, pp. 353-360. Donatella della Porta, Social Movements, Political Violence, and the State: A Comparative Analysis of Italy and Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1995. 36-50, 137-142 Week 7: Midterm: October 16 th Week 8: The Individual Causes of Terrorism Lecture: October 21 st, Section: October 23 rd Krueger, Alan B., and Jitka Maleckova. "Education, Poverty and Terrorism: Is there a causal connection?." The Journal of Economic Perspectives 17.4 (2003): 119-144. Lee, Alexander. "Who Becomes a Terrorist?: Poverty, Education, and the Origins of Political Violence." World Politics 63.02 (2011): 203-245. Gambetta, Diego, and Steffen Hertog. "Engineers of Jihad." (2007). Week 9: The IRA Lecture: October 28 th, October 30 th [Topic for Data Exercise Due] P.287-345. PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 3

Richard English, Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA, (pp. 337-84) New York: Norton, 2002. Week 10: Networks and Group Structure Lecture: November 4 th, Section: November 6 th Zelinsky, Aaron, and Martin Shubik. "Research Note: Terrorist Groups as Business Firms: A New Typological Framework." Terrorism and Political Violence 21.2 (2009): 327-336. Koschade, Stuart. A Social Network Analysis of Jemaah Islamiyah: The applications to counterterrorism and intelligence." Studies in Conflict and Terrorism 29.6 (2006): 559-575. Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni and Calvert Jones (2008). Assessing the Dangers of Illicit Networks: Why al- Qaida May be Less Threatening Than We Think. International Security 33(2): 7-44. Week 11: The PLO Lecture: November 11 th, November 13 th P. 152-188, 380-396 Barry Rubin, Revolution Until Victory? The Politics and History of the PLO (Harvard, 1994) P.1-43 Hassan, Nasra. An Arsenal of Believers. New Yorker, November 19, pp. 36 41. 2001. Week 12: Suicide Terrorism Lecture: November 18 th, Section: November 20 th Hoffman, Bruce (2006) Inside Terrorism, 2nd ed. New York: Columbia University Press, 131-171. Pape, Robert A. "The strategic logic of suicide terrorism." American Political Science Review 97.3 (2003): 343-361. Ashworth, Scott, et al. "Design, inference, and the strategic logic of suicide terrorism." American Political Science Review 102.02 (2008): 269-273. Week 13 Thanksgiving, No Class Week 14: Al-Qaida Lecture: December 2 nd, December 4 th [Data Exercise Due] The 9/11 Commission Report (2004). New York: W. W. Norton, 47-70; 145-173; 215-253. PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 4

Lawrence, Bruce (2005). Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama Bin Laden. London: Verso, 23-30; 58-62. Silber, Mitchell. The Al-Qaeda Factor: Plots Against the West. College Station: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012. P. 107-143 Week 15: Counterterrorism Lecture: December 9 th, Section: December 11 th Hoffman, Bruce (2006) Inside Terrorism, 2nd ed. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 131-156. Stern, Jessica. "Mind over martyr: How to deradicalize Islamist extremists." Foreign Affairs (2010): 95-108. Bergen, Peter, and Katherine Tiedemann. "Washington's Phantom War: The Effects of the US Drone Programs in Pakistan." Foreign Affairs 90 (2011): 12-18 Kaplan, Robert D. "Hunting the Taliban in Las Vegas." Atlantic Monthly 298.2 (2006): 81-83. Week 16 Final Exam, Friday December 19 th at 4pm. PSC/IR 273 The Politics of Terrorism Fall 2014 5