17 results on '"Hunter, Lance Y."'
Search Results
2. The Double-Edged Sword of Foreign Direct Investment on Domestic Terrorism.
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Biglaiser, Glen, Hunter, Lance Y, and McGauvran, Ronald J
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DOMESTIC terrorism , *FOREIGN investments , *TERRORISM , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *STATE-sponsored terrorism , *TIME series analysis , *COUNTERTERRORISM - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of foreign direct investment (FDI) on domestic terrorism. Using a cross-national, time-series analysis of 114 countries from 1991–2017, and employing structural equation modeling to test a number of mediating factors, we find that the impact of FDI on domestic terrorism depends on the host state's level of economic development. For host countries at higher-income levels, FDI boosts economic development and global integration promoting prosperity, increasing counterterrorism resources, and reducing the economic grievances that foster terrorism. Conversely, for lower-income host countries, increased FDI fuels higher domestic terrorism, as it intensifies clashes between traditional and modern elements within society, raises economic discrimination, heightens perceptions of economic insecurity, and subsequently leads to grievances directed against the state. Our results indicate a curvilinear relationship between FDI inflows and domestic terrorism, suggesting that FDI produces a double-edged sword between promoting economic development and increasing domestic terrorism in host states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Social media, disinformation, and democracy: how different types of social media usage affect democracy cross-nationally.
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Hunter, Lance Y.
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SOCIAL media , *DEMOCRACY , *DISINFORMATION , *POLITICAL campaigns , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Much speculation exists regarding how social media impacts the health of democracies. However, minimal scholarly research empirically examines the effect social media has on democracy across multiple states and regions. Thus, this article analyses the effect social media and disinformation transmitted over social media have on democracy. The findings from a cross-national, time-series analysis of 158 states from 2000–2019 indicate that different types of social media usage have varying effects on democracy. General social media consumption, the presence of diverse political viewpoints on social media, and the use of social media in political campaigns bolster democracy. However, social media disinformation, online political polarization, and the use of social media to organize offline violence reduce overall levels of democracy. In addition, a mediation analysis is conducted to identify the precise linkages between social media disinformation and democracy and indicates that government and political party disinformation impact democracy by weakening key democratic norms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. The Fourth Industrial Revolution, Artificial Intelligence, and Domestic Conflict.
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Hunter, Lance Y., Albert, Craig, Rutland, Josh, and Hennigan, Chris
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INDUSTRY 4.0 , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *DOMESTIC terrorism , *INTERNATIONAL alliances , *STATE-sponsored terrorism , *LABOR policy - Abstract
An emerging field of scholarship in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and computing posits that AI has the potential to significantly alter political and economic landscapes within states by reconfiguring labor markets, economies, and political alliances, leading to possible societal disruptions. Thus, this study examines the potential destabilizing economic and political effects AI technology can have on societies and the resulting implications for domestic conflict based on research within the fields of political science, sociology, economics, and artificial intelligence. In addition, we conduct interviews with 10 international AI experts from think tanks, academia, multinational technology companies, the military, and cyber to assess the possible disruptive effects of AI and how they can affect domestic conflict. Lastly, the study offers steps governments can take to mitigate the potentially destabilizing effects of AI technology to reduce the likelihood of civil conflict and domestic terrorism within states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. The military application of artificial intelligence technology in the United States, China, and Russia and the implications for global security.
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Hunter, Lance Y., Albert, Craig D., Henningan, Christopher, and Rutland, Josh
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *GREAT powers (International relations) , *STATE power , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *BALANCE of power - Abstract
A number of studies have considered the theoretical role that Artificial Intelligence (AI) may play in shaping the global balance of power in the future. While these studies are informative, we currently lack an understanding regarding the precise manner AI technologies are being applied and incorporated in militaries in major power states. Thus, in this study, we examine how AI technology is being applied in the militaries in the US, China, and Russia and analyse the implications for the future of AI, global military competition, and international security. We examine current research on the military application of AI technology in the US, China, and Russia and conduct expert interviews with leading AI experts in academia, think tanks, multinational technology companies, and the military to better understand how AI technology is being applied in the three major powers states and the implications for global security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. The Effects of Social Media, Elites, and Political Polarization on Civil Conflict.
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Hunter, Lance Y. and Biglaiser, Glen
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Abstract Although prior research has investigated how social, economic, and political factors affect civil conflict, empirical scholarship has yet to consider how social media impacts civil conflict. Using cross-national research for up to 157 states from 2000–2019, this study examines the effect social media has on civil conflict. We find that more time spent on social media, greater social media penetration (i.e. the number of users), and the specific manner elites use social media are associated with an increased number and severity of civil conflicts. We also carry out mediation analysis and see that elite use of social media to organize offline political activities, government elites’ dissemination of false information, and political party elites’ dissemination of disinformation are all correlated with an increase in political polarization, and polarization raises the likelihood of civil conflict. Our results indicate the ways social media affects political violence, showing how different communication technologies can serve to exacerbate civil conflict under certain conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. TERRORISM AND RIGHT-PARTY VOTE SHARES IN LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS: A Cross-National Analysis.
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Hunter, Lance Y., Robbins, Joseph W., and Ginn, Martha H.
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LEGISLATIVE voting , *ELECTIONS , *VOTING , *EMOTIONS , *TERRORISM , *POLITICAL parties , *PARTISANSHIP , *SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 - Abstract
This study examines the electoral consequences for ideologically right-leaning political parties in the wake of terrorist attacks by employing an original dataset that captures political party vote shares and multiple terrorist indicators. Our analysis extends the partisan voting hypothesis to 56 democracies from multiple regions and levels of development between 1975–2014. Specifically, we find that the origins of terrorist perpetrators, the severity of terrorist attacks, and the frequency of terrorist incidents decrease right-party vote shares in legislative contests when incorporating standard controls. All told, these findings reinforce political psychological reasoning that contends terrorist attacks impact citizens' emotions and voting calculations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. The Effect of Terrorism on Income Inequality.
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McGauvran, Ronald J, Biglaiser, Glen, Hunter, Lance Y, and Lee, Hoon
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DOMESTIC terrorism , *INCOME inequality , *TERRORISM , *FOREIGN investments , *COUNTERTERRORISM , *INSTITUTIONAL environment - Abstract
Conflict research has recently found that increased inequality weakens institutional conditions, opening the door for terrorism. While this research often accounts for endogeneity, or the possibility of a reverse causal relationship, there has yet to be an empirical investigation of the impact of terrorism on income inequality. Using a sample of 139 countries between 1994 and 2018, we show that both domestic and transnational terrorism result in higher levels of income inequality. Our results are consistent for both pre- and post-tax and transfer inequality as well as multiple model specifications. Additionally, we explore multiple potential causal mechanisms that link terrorism and income inequality finding that the effect is, in part, due to terrorism's negative effects on institutional stability, increased military expenditure, possibly to fund counterterrorism operations, and reduced foreign capital, especially for greenfield investment. Our analysis indicates a positive relationship between terrorism and inequality and the mechanisms that produce the effect, contributing to the terrorism and inequality literatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Domestic terrorism, incumbency, and legislative vote shares.
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Hunter, Lance Y, Robbins, Joseph W, and Ginn, Martha H
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A small number of studies have examined the effect terrorism has on political ideology and vote choice cross-nationally. However, scholars yet to understand how terrorist attack type influences vote choice based on the political ideology of incumbent governments. Thus, we examine the effect domestic and transnational terrorist attacks have on vote choice in legislative elections while accounting for the ideology of the incumbent government. In examining 56 democracies from 1975 – 2014 from various regions and levels of development, we find that domestic attacks, and not transnational, significantly effect both right and left party votes shares when the incumbent party in government is of a similar ideology. We attribute these results to the perception of instability that accompanies domestic attacks and the effects it has on voters’ evaluations of political parties. These findings have important implications for understanding how terrorism influences electoral behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Leaving the Barracks: Military Coups in Developing Democracies.
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Hunter, Lance Y., Rutland, Josh, and King, Zachary
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COUPS d'etat , *EVENT history analysis , *SECTARIAN conflict , *HISTORICAL analysis , *ETHNIC conflict ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
A large body of research has examined the factors that influence military coups in authoritarian and democratic states. While this research is informative, we contend that three factors are central in assessing the likelihood of military coups in developing democracies: the perception of corruption within regimes, levels of popular support, and the incentives segments of the military have to initiate coups. In utilizing a historical case‐study analysis with six states in Africa, Asia, and Latin America (from 1970‐2010) we find that successful military coups are more likely to occur when the ruling administration is increasingly viewed by the public as being corrupt, is unpopular with large portions of society and key factions within the state, and when segments of the military perceive their position within the state as being threatened by the current regime. These findings have important implications for democratic governance in developing democracies. Related Articles: Hiroi, Taeko, and Sawa Omori. 2013. "Causes and Triggers of Coups d'état: An Event History Analysis." Politics & Policy 41 (1): 39‐64. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12001 Kim, Hae S. 2009. "The Complexities of Internal Conflict in the Third World: Beyond Ethnic and Religious Conflict." Politics & Policy 37 (2): 395‐414. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2009.00177.x/abstract McCarthy‐Jones, Anthea, and Mark Turner. 2015. "Policy Transfer through Time and the Search for Legitimacy in Developing Nations." Politics & Policy 43 (2): 215‐238. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12113 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Internet connectivity and domestic terrorism in democracies.
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Hunter, Lance Y., Griffith, Candace E., and Warren, Thomas
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INTERNET , *DOMESTIC terrorism , *DEMOCRACY , *TERRORISM , *TERRORIST recruiting - Abstract
Through case study analyses a small body of research has focused on the role the internet plays in radicalizing potential lone wolf terrorists. However, scholars have yet to examine how internet connectivity influences terrorism cross-nationally. Thus, this project attempts to address that limitation. This paper examines the effect internet connectivity has on domestic terrorism in 80 democracies from 1992–2012. Using standard controls and multiple connectivity indicators, we find that greater connectivity is associated with increased domestic terrorism. However, the effects of internet connectivity on domestic terrorism are conditioned by levels of state wealth and domestic turmoil within democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. The effects of COVID-19 on domestic and international security in democratic and authoritarian regimes.
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Topping, Kristen, Hosny, Yousef, Hunter, Lance Y., and Yang, Yufan
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AUTHORITARIANISM , *INTERNATIONAL security , *COVID-19 pandemic , *DISEASE outbreaks , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
While numerous studies have examined how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected health care systems, supply chains, and economies, we do not understand how the pandemic has impacted the security of democratic and authoritarian states from a global standpoint. Thus, this study examines how COVID-19 has affected the security of democratic and authoritarian regimes. In conducting a historical, qualitative review of the security effects of the pandemic, we find that COVID-19 significantly affected domestic and international security for democratic and authoritarian states in both similar and varied ways. Additionally, the manner in which states responded to the pandemic was often conditioned by their regime type and by the nature of the governing leadership during the pandemic. These findings have important implications in considering how COVID-19 affected the security of democratic and authoritarian states, how regime type shapes government responses to infectious disease outbreaks, and how democratic and authoritarian states may respond to future pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Party system stability and conflict initiation.
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Hunter, Lance Y and Robbins, Joseph W
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SOCIAL conflict , *POLITICAL parties , *POLITICAL parties & society , *ELECTIONS , *CONFLICT of interests - Abstract
The study of interstate conflict has yielded a voluminous literature to date, yet much of the recent work has only just begun to underscore the importance of domestic factors in predicting conflict initiation in democracies. In short, some of these studies find that when electoral accountability is greater—measured in a variety of ways—interstate conflict becomes less likely. Despite this burgeoning literature, scholars have spent far less time analysing the role linkage institutions, such as stable party systems, have played in foreign policy discussions. To address this gap, we argue that in more stable party systems conflict initiation becomes less likely due to the greater accountability present in these systems. This conjecture is supported by the results of a time-series cross-sectional analysis of 48 democracies from 1978 to 2000 that uses multiple measures of conflict initiation and party system stability. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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14. Terrorism, Civil Liberties, and Political Rights: A Cross-National Analysis.
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Hunter, Lance Y.
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TERRORISM , *CIVIL rights , *LOSS of political rights , *POLITICAL rights , *DEMOCRACY , *TERRORISM policy , *COUNTERTERRORISM - Abstract
This article examines the effect terrorism has on civil liberties and political rights across a wide range of democracies and regions. This study includes an analysis of the influence domestic and international terrorist attacks have on civil liberties and political rights in 48 democratic states from 1971–2007. The results from a time series cross-national analysis reveal that terrorism weakens civil liberties and political rights. However, certain types of democracies are more affected by terrorism than others. These findings have important implications for democracy and counterterrorism strategies in democratic states. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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15. Military Spending and Electoral Systems.
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Hunter, Lance Y. and Robbins, Joseph W.
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MILITARY spending , *MILITARY budgets , *CIVIL-military relations , *ELECTIONS , *CIVIL supremacy over the military - Abstract
The implications for funding a military, though important, are still not fully understood. Existing work often surmises that military spending is higher in majoritarian electoral systems that are predicated on personalistic ties. However, further examination casts doubt upon these findings. Accordingly, we present a pooled time-series cross-sectional analysis of military spending and electoral institutions and we find that party-based electoral systems, rather than majoritarian ones, foment higher military spending levels—which we attribute to these systems’ predilection for public goods spending. These results are robust even when a host of control measures and four different military spending metrics are employed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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16. Impact of electoral volatility and party replacement on voter turnout levels.
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Robbins, Joseph W. and Hunter, Lance Y.
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ELECTIONS , *DEMOCRACY , *POLITICAL parties , *VOTERS , *POLITICAL systems , *TIME series analysis - Abstract
While elections are viewed as the lynchpin of modern democracies, few works have adequately assessed the role played by political parties in mobilizing voters. Much of the extant work has relied on the number of parties in a party system to estimate the impact on voter turnout; not surprisingly, the voluminous literature on voter turnout has arrived at a theoretical impasse regarding the relationship between party systems and voter turnout. We argue that in order to better understand the relationship between party systems and voter turnout, researchers should consider other relevant party system measures. In particular, several scholars have surmised that party system stability holds numerous implications for democracies, but there has yet to be an empirical analysis of this claim. In this study, we anticipate that lower volatility and replacement rates – both indicating more stable party systems – should have a positive impact on aggregate turnout. Even when including several control variables, the results of our cross-sectional time-series analyses confirm our hypotheses. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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17. Terrorism's effect on Europe's centre- and far-right parties.
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Wheatley, William, Robbins, Joseph, Hunter, Lance Y., and Ginn, Martha Humphries
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TERRORISM , *VICTIMS of terrorism , *POLITICAL violence , *PARTISANSHIP , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
European far-right parties have enjoyed mixed success in the past few years. The primary elements in many of these parties' policy platforms centre on security, terrorism, and foreign persons. Naturally, these platforms are designed to attract electoral support that these actors can parlay into governing positions. Our study offers an important test to ascertain how voters respond to terrorist attacks with respect to centre- and far-right parties. We contend that far-right parties are to likely benefit from terrorist attacks more than centre-right parties. The results from more than 30 European countries, spanning 1975–2013, affirm our hypothesis. The implications for partisanship, governance, and terrorism are explored in this paper as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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