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Journal Article

Citation

Loertscher S, Milton D. Democr. Secur. 2018; 14(1): 1-23.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/17419166.2017.1380523

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Hostage taking of Westerners by militant groups has increased since 9/11. Despite this rising problem, there has been little academic research on how a hostage's individual characteristics influence the outcome of the incident. Using a newly collected dataset of over 1,000 individuals taken hostage in incidents involving terrorist groups since 2001, this article evaluates how individual, national, and group characteristics influence the likelihood that hostage incidents end with the release or execution of the hostage. The findings show that a hostage's nationality and occupation are significant individual-level drivers of outcomes, while the nature of the militant group itself also matters.


Language: en

Keywords

Hostage taking; militant groups; negotiation policy

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