Psychosocial Stress in Immigrants and in Members of Minority Groups as a Factor of Terrorist BehaviorMichal Finklestein, Kim Dent-Brown IOS Press, 2008 - 209 עמודים On one hand immigration is encouraged and on the other the rights and obligations of newcomers in a country are not always clear. Creating a theoretical link between concepts and terms allied to immigration and terrorism is based on worldwide evidence. This book helps in understanding the etiology of terrorism and what to do to prevent it. |
תוכן
Part 2 Immigration as a Risk Factor vs a Potential of Post Traumatic Growth | 61 |
Part 3 Varied Perceptions Ideological Attributes and Factors of Terrorism in Immigrants and Minorities | 107 |
Will Understanding of Deprived Rights of Immigrants and Minorities Lead to Less Terrorism? | 153 |
Executive Summary | 192 |
205 | |
Author Index | 209 |
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
2008 IOS Press acculturation adaptation Afghanistan Al Qaeda Arabs Asian perpetrator asylum seekers attitudes attribution style attribution theory bereaved Chechen Chechnya complicated grief reactions conflict cultural Dent-Brown Eds denunciation of terrorism discrimination economic Ethiopian immigrants Ethiopian Jews ethnic groups ethnic identity Europe European experience Factor of Terrorist Family Reunification Finklestein global Greece host country individuals integration interventions involved Islamic Islamist Islamophobia Israel Israeli issues Italian Italy Jewish perpetrator Jews jihad jihadist Jordan Journal level of denunciation living Madrid mental health minority Moldova moral panic Moses mosques Muslim immigrants NATO Northern Ireland Palestinian perpetrator Palestinian Refugees participants Poland political population post migration posttraumatic prejudice present problems psychological psychological adaptation psychosocial PTSD radicalization recruitment relations religious response result role scenario schools social Solomon stress symptoms Taliban terrorist terrorist attacks Terrorist Behavior threat trafficking traumatic loss violence Western women