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BRYM, ROBERT J (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   113532


Are suicide bombers suicidal? / Brym, Robert J; Araj, Bader   Journal Article
Araj, Bader Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Recent work by Ariel Merari argues that, while certain contextual factors increase the probability of suicide attacks, they do not explain why particular individuals become suicide bombers. Merari seeks to demonstrate that suicide bombers are motivated by an unusually high prevalence of depression and suicidal tendencies. This article questions the representativeness of Merari's sample. It raises the possibility that interviewer and contextual effects contaminated his findings. Finally, it presents evidence that challenges Merari's conclusions. This evidence is drawn from interviews with immediate family members and close friends of a 25 percent random sample of Palestinian suicide bombers who conducted attacks between 2000 and 2005. Based on their analysis, the authors question the value of a psychological approach to the study of suicide bombers and assert the importance of focusing on the political and social roots of the phenomenon.
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2
ID:   090201


Israeli state violence during the second intifada: combining new institutionalist and rational choice approaches / Brym, Robert J; Maoz-Shai, Yael   Journal Article
Brym, Robert J Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract In attempting to explain Israel's retaliatory policies toward Palestinian violence, new institutionalist and rational choice theories vie for dominance. This article argues that both approaches can contribute to understanding the severity of Israel's response if they are viewed as nested explanations appropriate to different threat levels. The article makes its case using data from 74 interviews with senior Israeli counterterrorist experts (2006-07), counts of Israeli and Palestinian fatalities due to state and collective violence (1987-2007), and a database of collective violence events during the Second Intifada (2000-05). Institutional effects are evident at low threat levels, as new institutionalists predict, but these effects are overwhelmed at high threat levels, as rational choice theorists assert.
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3
ID:   083696


Palestinian suicide bombing revisited: a critique of the outbidding thesis / Brym, Robert J; Araj, Bader   Journal Article
Araj, Bader Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract Robert J. Brym and Bader Araj contest Mia Bloom's outbidding thesis, which holds that suicide attacks are a currency for outbidding rivals in the competition for popular support. They find that public opinion data are inconsistent with the outbidding thesis and argue that support for suicide bombing is more a function of social solidarity than competition within the Palestinian community
Key Words Palestine  Terrorism  Middle East  Suicide Bombing 
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4
ID:   115358


Suicidality and suicide bombing revisited: a rejoinder to merari / Brym, Robert J; Araj, Bader   Journal Article
Araj, Bader Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Ariel Merari purports to demonstrate a tendency on the part of suicide bombers to be motivated by depression and suicidal tendencies. However, he misconstrues the present authors' critique of his work and misinterprets their research. By clarifying both issues, this article seeks to substantiate three claims: (1) Merari's sampling procedure precludes generalization; (2) interviewer and contextual effects probably bias his findings; (3) evidence challenges his inferences.
Key Words Suicide Bombers  Suicide Bombing 
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