The Economics of Violence: How Behavioral Science Can Transform our View of Crime, Insurgency, and Terrorism

Author:   Gary M. Shiffman (Georgetown University, Washington DC)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107092464


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   30 January 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $245.81 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Economics of Violence: How Behavioral Science Can Transform our View of Crime, Insurgency, and Terrorism


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Gary M. Shiffman (Georgetown University, Washington DC)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.510kg
ISBN:  

9781107092464


ISBN 10:   1107092469
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   30 January 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

'As advances in behavioral science reveal the complex but animating dynamics of human behavior, all those forces that make us fear, or fight, or give us courage, or move us to some action, nefarious states and organizations are learning how to manipulate people and become drivers of violence. In his illuminating new book, national security veteran Gary M. Shiffman takes us to the edge of understanding the nexus between behavior and organized violence. This is a must read not only for leaders in the defense and security sector, but all leaders who want to better understand the opportunities and the dangers of manipulating human action.' Steve Clemons, Editor at Large, The Hill 'Conventional wisdom often views sub-state violence as an irrational expression of religious, tribal, or ethnic identity. In his must-read book, Gary M. Shiffman offers a powerful counter, demonstrating that understanding organized violence requires analyzing individual decision-making - and the available incentives and choices. Shiffman combines his own rich experience with deep economic analysis and case studies that range from Pablo Escobar to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and, in so doing, has written a definitive volume on the insights behavioral science offers to national security policymakers.' Richard Fontaine, CEO, Center for a New American Security (CNAS) 'Readable and ambitious, The Economics of Violence uses colorful examples to sketch a common approach to studying organized crime, insurgency, and terrorism. Professor Shiffman then draws on his own experience to explain how those insights can inform combatting all three. Highly recommended for practitioners, scholars, and anyone interested in new thinking on how these threats can be contained.' Eli Berman, co-author of Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict 'The Economics of Violence is a pathbreaking work that argues how a more rigorous understanding of human behavior can be harnessed to counter violence more effectively. Drawing on his formidable intellect and experiences in the military, as a Senate staffer, a homeland security executive, an entrepreneur, and a security studies scholar, Shiffman makes a powerful case for this unique approach to strengthening US national security.' Bruce Hoffman, Georgetown University, Washington DC, and author of Inside Terrorism 'Gary M. Shiffman's new book, The Economics of Violence, is unique, provocative, and important.' Senator Joe Lieberman 'Understanding political violence requires turning away from simplistic labels - 'ethno-nationalist', 'narco-terrorist', 'religious radical' - toward the scientifically grounded concepts of scarcity, markets, and firms. Shiffman's enlightening and accessible prose demystifies today's national security threats with precise logic, careful case studies, and wide-ranging pop-culture references. A brilliant ground-breaking book that every national security professional should read.' Jacob Shapiro, Princeton University, New Jersey 'Gary M. Shiffman uses the science of economics as a tool for understanding violent human behavior, and he shows us how better to understand those who would harm us. Gary brings provocative, innovative, and exciting ideas to those seeking knowledge, clarity, and peace of mind in the promotion of freedom and security. The Economics of Violence is an exciting new book from an established and important voice in national security.' Senator Connie Mack, III 'This is a valuable book that should set records straight about stereotypes, identity, politics, and misleading assumptions. I have been disabused of some of my assumptions, and the reader will find the recipe for combatting violent groups in the last chapter.' HRH Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Sa'ud, former Director General of the General Intelligence Directorate of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 'Gary M. Shiffman has always been a clarion voice in understanding the importance of behavioral science and economics in national security - never more so than in this work. In this book, Shiffman has provided a seminal study of how economic dynamics and individual decisions affect the manifestations of violence and the evolution of terrorist, militant, and criminal movements in a changing global landscape. By using an economic lens, he breaks down the orthodoxy between traditional disciplines and rigid categories of identity to understand sources of violence and how non-state actors emerge, adapt, and compete. By examining the cases of Pablo Escobar, Joseph Kony, and Osama bin Laden in this way, he is able to explain how each have acted as 'entrepreneurs' using force and forms of coercion to capture markets, each in his own way. This should become required reading for those seeking to understand how individual decisions drive sub-state groups and violence, and how we might use these insights to counter this violence and fight like entrepreneurs.' Juan C. Zarate, former Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Combatting Terrorism (2005-9) 'The Economics of Violence: How Behavioral Science Can Transform our View of Crime, Insurgency, and Terrorism is a model of meticulous scholarship that is expertly organized and effectively presented. An impressively informative contribution to our on-going national dialogue, especially given the dramatic impact that the pandemic is having on both the American and the Global economies ... It should be noted for the personal reading lists of students, academia, governmental policy makers, and non- specialist general readers with an interest in the subject that ...' James A. Cox, Midwest Book Review


'As advances in behavioral science reveal the complex but animating dynamics of human behavior, all those forces that make us fear, or fight, or give us courage, or move us to some action, nefarious states and organizations are learning how to manipulate people and become drivers of violence. In his illuminating new book, national security veteran Gary M. Shiffman takes us to the edge of understanding the nexus between behavior and organized violence. This is a must read not only for leaders in the defense and security sector, but all leaders who want to better understand the opportunities and the dangers of manipulating human action.' Steve Clemons, Editor at Large, The Hill 'Conventional wisdom often views sub-state violence as an irrational expression of religious, tribal, or ethnic identity. In his must-read book, Gary M. Shiffman offers a powerful counter, demonstrating that understanding organized violence requires analyzing individual decision-making - and the available incentives and choices. Shiffman combines his own rich experience with deep economic analysis and case studies that range from Pablo Escobar to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and, in so doing, has written a definitive volume on the insights behavioral science offers to national security policymakers.' Richard Fontaine, CEO, Center for a New American Security (CNAS) 'Readable and ambitious, The Economics of Violence uses colorful examples to sketch a common approach to studying organized crime, insurgency, and terrorism. Professor Shiffman then draws on his own experience to explain how those insights can inform combatting all three. Highly recommended for practitioners, scholars, and anyone interested in new thinking on how these threats can be contained.' Eli Berman, co-author of Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict 'The Economics of Violence is a pathbreaking work that argues how a more rigorous understanding of human behavior can be harnessed to counter violence more effectively. Drawing on his formidable intellect and experiences in the military, as a Senate staffer, a homeland security executive, an entrepreneur, and a security studies scholar, Shiffman makes a powerful case for this unique approach to strengthening US national security.' Bruce Hoffman, Georgetown University, Washington DC, and author of Inside Terrorism 'Gary M. Shiffman's new book, The Economics of Violence, is unique, provocative, and important.' Senator Joe Lieberman 'Understanding political violence requires turning away from simplistic labels - 'ethno-nationalist', 'narco-terrorist', 'religious radical' - toward the scientifically grounded concepts of scarcity, markets, and firms. Shiffman's enlightening and accessible prose demystifies today's national security threats with precise logic, careful case studies, and wide-ranging pop-culture references. A brilliant ground-breaking book that every national security professional should read.' Jacob Shapiro, Princeton University, New Jersey 'Gary M. Shiffman uses the science of economics as a tool for understanding violent human behavior, and he shows us how better to understand those who would harm us. Gary brings provocative, innovative, and exciting ideas to those seeking knowledge, clarity, and peace of mind in the promotion of freedom and security. The Economics of Violence is an exciting new book from an established and important voice in national security.' Senator Connie Mack, III 'This is a valuable book that should set records straight about stereotypes, identity, politics, and misleading assumptions. I have been disabused of some of my assumptions, and the reader will find the recipe for combatting violent groups in the last chapter.' HRH Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Sa'ud, former Director General of the General Intelligence Directorate of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 'Gary M. Shiffman has always been a clarion voice in understanding the importance of behavioral science and economics in national security - never more so than in this work. In this book, Shiffman has provided a seminal study of how economic dynamics and individual decisions affect the manifestations of violence and the evolution of terrorist, militant, and criminal movements in a changing global landscape. By using an economic lens, he breaks down the orthodoxy between traditional disciplines and rigid categories of identity to understand sources of violence and how non-state actors emerge, adapt, and compete. By examining the cases of Pablo Escobar, Joseph Kony, and Osama bin Laden in this way, he is able to explain how each have acted as 'entrepreneurs' using force and forms of coercion to capture markets, each in his own way. This should become required reading for those seeking to understand how individual decisions drive sub-state groups and violence, and how we might use these insights to counter this violence and fight like entrepreneurs.' Juan C. Zarate, former Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Combatting Terrorism (2005-9) 'As advances in behavioral science reveal the complex but animating dynamics of human behavior, all those forces that make us fear, or fight, or give us courage, or move us to some action, nefarious states and organizations are learning how to manipulate people and become drivers of violence. In his illuminating new book, national security veteran Gary M. Shiffman takes us to the edge of understanding the nexus between behavior and organized violence. This is a must read not only for leaders in the defense and security sector, but all leaders who want to better understand the opportunities and the dangers of manipulating human action.' Steve Clemons, Editor at Large, The Hill 'Conventional wisdom often views sub-state violence as an irrational expression of religious, tribal, or ethnic identity. In his must-read book, Gary M. Shiffman offers a powerful counter, demonstrating that understanding organized violence requires analyzing individual decision-making - and the available incentives and choices. Shiffman combines his own rich experience with deep economic analysis and case studies that range from Pablo Escobar to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and, in so doing, has written a definitive volume on the insights behavioral science offers to national security policymakers.' Richard Fontaine, CEO, Center for a New American Security (CNAS) 'Readable and ambitious, The Economics of Violence uses colorful examples to sketch a common approach to studying organized crime, insurgency, and terrorism. Professor Shiffman then draws on his own experience to explain how those insights can inform combatting all three. Highly recommended for practitioners, scholars, and anyone interested in new thinking on how these threats can be contained.' Eli Berman, co-author of Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict 'The Economics of Violence is a pathbreaking work that argues how a more rigorous understanding of human behavior can be harnessed to counter violence more effectively. Drawing on his formidable intellect and experiences in the military, as a Senate staffer, a homeland security executive, an entrepreneur, and a security studies scholar, Shiffman makes a powerful case for this unique approach to strengthening US national security.' Bruce Hoffman, Georgetown University, Washington DC, and author of Inside Terrorism 'Gary M. Shiffman's new book, The Economics of Violence, is unique, provocative, and important.' Senator Joe Lieberman 'Understanding political violence requires turning away from simplistic labels - 'ethno-nationalist', 'narco-terrorist', 'religious radical' - toward the scientifically grounded concepts of scarcity, markets, and firms. Shiffman's enlightening and accessible prose demystifies today's national security threats with precise logic, careful case studies, and wide-ranging pop-culture references. A brilliant ground-breaking book that every national security professional should read.' Jacob Shapiro, Princeton University, New Jersey 'Gary M. Shiffman uses the science of economics as a tool for understanding violent human behavior, and he shows us how better to understand those who would harm us. Gary brings provocative, innovative, and exciting ideas to those seeking knowledge, clarity, and peace of mind in the promotion of freedom and security. The Economics of Violence is an exciting new book from an established and important voice in national security.' Senator Connie Mack, III 'This is a valuable book that should set records straight about stereotypes, identity, politics, and misleading assumptions. I have been disabused of some of my assumptions, and the reader will find the recipe for combatting violent groups in the last chapter.' HRH Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Sa'ud, former Director General of the General Intelligence Directorate of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 'Gary M. Shiffman has always been a clarion voice in understanding the importance of behavioral science and economics in national security - never more so than in this work. In this book, Shiffman has provided a seminal study of how economic dynamics and individual decisions affect the manifestations of violence and the evolution of terrorist, militant, and criminal movements in a changing global landscape. By using an economic lens, he breaks down the orthodoxy between traditional disciplines and rigid categories of identity to understand sources of violence and how non-state actors emerge, adapt, and compete. By examining the cases of Pablo Escobar, Joseph Kony, and Osama bin Laden in this way, he is able to explain how each have acted as 'entrepreneurs' using force and forms of coercion to capture markets, each in his own way. This should become required reading for those seeking to understand how individual decisions drive sub-state groups and violence, and how we might use these insights to counter this violence and fight like entrepreneurs.' Juan C. Zarate, former Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Combatting Terrorism (2005-9)


Author Information

Gary M. Shiffman, Ph.D., a veteran of the US Departments of Defense and Homeland Security and the Senate, teaches at Georgetown University, Washington DC, and explores the science of behavior, particularly the ways in which we can understand illicit behaviors. At Giant Oak, he creates software to make the world safer and more secure.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List