“…Likewise, uncontrolled descriptive studies of terrorists have yielded to comparative studies, such as ideologically motivated versus non-ideological mass murderers (Horgan, Gill, Bouhana, Silver, & Corner, 2016); individual terrorists versus autonomous cells in Europe (Meloy, Roshdi, et al, 2015); jihadist versus single-issue versus right wing terrorists (Gill, Horgan, & Deckert, 2013); terrorists versus murderers in Iraq (Dhumad, Candilis, Cleary, Dyer, & Khalifa, 2019); and violent versus non-violent extremists in the UK (Knight, Woodward, & Lancaster, 2017). These efforts have all contributed to the disaggregation of the meaning of "terrorist" and "terrorism" (Desmarais, Simons-Rudolph, Brugh, Schilling, & Hoggan, 2017) and the recognition that differences in static (e.g., age, education, history of criminality) and dynamic (e.g., roles, pre-offense behaviors) characteristics yield more operationally relevant data (Borum, 2015) and help to bridge the gap between academia and pragmatic efforts at prevention.…”