2004
DOI: 10.1016/s0176-2680(04)00033-3
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Supreme values as the basis for terror

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Cited by 29 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…Nevertheless, moderate nihilists may well respond to changing incentives. Bernholz (2004) provides as alternative explanation for why terrorists may possibly not respond to economic, political or social incentives lexicographic preferences ('supreme values'). generated in case both groups are shaped by two greatly differing cultures -they 'clash '.…”
Section: Frey and Lüchinger 2003)mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Nevertheless, moderate nihilists may well respond to changing incentives. Bernholz (2004) provides as alternative explanation for why terrorists may possibly not respond to economic, political or social incentives lexicographic preferences ('supreme values'). generated in case both groups are shaped by two greatly differing cultures -they 'clash '.…”
Section: Frey and Lüchinger 2003)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aggregated to the population level as percentage shares of people responding either (3) or (4), we view this attitude as an approximation of a terror-sympathizing environment. As we argue in section 2, such terror-sympathizing environment may aid terrorists in carrying out their attacks or provide them with a pool of potential recruits -decreasing their costs of committing an attack (Schnellenbach 2006, Bernholz 2004. Thus, as rational terrorists weigh the expected costs against the expected benefits of an additional attack (Dreher and Fischer 2010), ceteris paribus, the optimal number of attacks should increase in people's support for terror.…”
Section: Dependent Variable: Terror and Violence Propensitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rationalist explanations for con ‡ict can be divided into the three main explanations reviewed by Fearon (1995); bargaining failures due to private information (for example in Cetinyan (2002)); commitment problems (for example in Fearon (2004)) and issue indivisibilities (as, for example, implied by Bernholz (2004)) on terrorism and supreme values). In the next section we will review the rationalist literature on support for violence which may make sense from a material perspective (in the absence of commitment to an e¢ cient outcome), but the crux of Fearon's puzzle is the support for violence where it does not provide an obvious material bene…t, in fact, the violence leads to a predictable material loss.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%