Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author Violent political movements: comparing the Shining Path to the Islamic State,2016,10,4,e524,Stohl ISIS resurgence in Al Hawl camp and human smuggling enterprises in Syria: crime and terror convergence?,2020,14,4,43-63,de Azevedo Cartel-related violence in Mexico as narco-terrorism or criminal insurgency: a literature review,2020,14,4,83-98,Teiner Taking fourth-generation warfare to the skies? An empirical exploration of non-state actors' use of weaponized unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs--'drones'),2020,14,5,26-39,Haugstvedt Is youth unemployment related to domestic terrorism?,2020,14,5,41-62,Adelaja Structural equation modeling of terrorism perception: new correlates of perception formation,2020,14,5,63-76,Ekici A comparative analysis of the nature and evolution of the domestic jihadist threat to Australia and Canada (2000-2020),2020,14,5,77-102,Dawson Organizational capacity and constituency dominance: why some militant groups wage sustained insurgencies,2020,14,5,103-116,Shkolnik The logic of violence in Africa's extremist insurgencies,2020,14,5,117-129,Boukhars Fabricated martyrs: the warrior-saint icons of far-right terrorism,2020,14,5,130-147,Weimann Restraint in terrorist groups and radical milieus: towards a research agenda,2020,14,6,2-12,Busher Non-involvement in terrorist violence: understanding the most common outcome of radicalization processes,2020,14,6,14-26,Schuurman Learning from the lack of political violence: conceptual issues and research designs,2020,14,6,27-36,Malkki Why the Nordic resistance movement restrains its use of violence,2020,14,6,37-48,Ravndal The internal brakes on violent escalation within the British extreme right in the 1990s,2020,14,6,49-64,Macklin On the permissibility of homicidal violence: perspectives from former U.S. White supremacists,2020,14,6,65-76,Blee Internal debates doubts and discussions on the scope of jihadi violence: the case of the turnup terror squad,2020,14,6,77-90,Holbrook Violence and restraint within antifa: a view from the United States,2020,14,6,122-138,Copsey Crossing the rubicon: the limits of insurgent violence in Kabardino-Balkaria,2020,14,6,106-121,Youngman Reality check: the real IRA's tactical adaptation and restraint in the aftermath of the Omagh bombing,2020,14,6,152-164,Morrison Understanding peace and restraint amidst ethnic violence: evidence from Kenya and Kyrgyzstan,2020,14,6,13,Jenkins From the armed struggle against the dictatorship to the socialist revolution: the narrative restraints to lethal violence among radical left organisations in Portugal,2020,14,6,139-151,da Silva Bibliography: defining and conceptualizing terrorism,2020,14,6,204-236,Tinnes Contexts of radicalization of jihadi foreign fighters from Europe,2022,16,3,4-21,Kanol How transnational is "transnational"? Foreign fighter recruit- ment and transnational operations among affiliates of al-Qaeda and the Islamic State,2022,16,1,23-37,Krause Typological varieties of transnational jihadism and implications for conflict resolution,2022,16,1,12-22,Matesan Transnational jihadism: a conflict to be resolved a movement to implode or an ideology to be countered?,2022,16,1,2-11,Sheikh Targeted violence: a review of the literature on radicalization and mobilization,2022,16,2,24-38,Savoia Repertoires of terrorism in Mexico's criminal war,2022,16,2,4-13,Feldmann Insights from comparing pre-attack variables in the Las Vegas mass shooting with ideologically motivated violent extremist attacks,2022,16,3,37-49,Kelly The relevance of high-risk prisons to Indonesia's preventing violent extremism policy,2022,16,3,22-36,Maulana Countering violent extremism or resolving conflicts? Bridging micro- and macro perspectives on countering jihad,2022,16,1,60-70,Svensson How religious violence ends,2022,16,1,38-45,Juergensmeyer Preventing harm: refutation of militant jihad in "revisionist literature",2022,16,1,46-59,El-Jaichi Camera-recorded extrajudicial executions by the Islamic State (2015-2020): analysis - statistics - data set,2022,16,1,71-100,Tinnes The contagion and copycat effect in transnational far-right terrorism: an analysis of language evidence,2022,16,4,4-26,Kupper Terrorism experts' predictions regarding the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the activities of violent non-state actors,2022,16,4,41-58,Veilleux-Lepage Security implications for India and Pakistan from the Taliban regime since the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan,2022,16,5,20-33,Ahlawat Google and corporate social responsibility: YouTube in the service of terrorism,2022,16,5,46-61,Cohen-Almagor Findings and implications from a project on White supremacist entry and exit pathways,2022,16,5,,Demichele Anti-government extremism: a new threat?,2022,16,6,2-8,Braddock What is anti-government extremism?,2022,16,6,9-18,Jackson Uncharted territory: towards an evidence-based criminology of sovereign citizens through a systematic literature review,2022,16,6,34-48,Koehler Driven by conspiracies: the justification of violence among "Reichsbürger" and other conspiracy-ideological sovereignists in contemporary Germany,2022,16,6,49-61,Rathje The QAnon security threat: a linguistic fusion-based violence risk assessment,2022,16,6,62-86,Whitehouse Politically motivated extreme-right attacks against elected representatives in contemporary Germany,2022,16,6,87-99,Kałabunowska Patterns and consequences of threats towards politicians: results from surveys of national and local politicians in Norway,2022,16,6,100-119,Bjørgo On the Permissibility of Homicidal Violence: Perspectives from Former U.S. White Supremacists,2020,14,6,65-76,Blee