Do Terrorists Get the Attention They Want? Comparing Effects of Terrorism across Europe

Autor: Nussio, Enzo, Bohmelt, Tobias, Bove, Vincenzo
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Politikwissenschaft
Psychologie
Political science
Psychology
Eurobarometer 32 (Oct-Nov 1989) (ZA1752)
Eurobarometer 36 (Oct-Nov 1991) (ZA2081)
Eurobarometer 37.2 (Apr-May 1992) (ZA2242)
Eurobarometer 38.1 (Nov 1992) (ZA2295)
Eurobarometer 41.1 (Jun-Jul 1994) (ZA2491)
Eurobarometer 54.1 (Oct-Nov 2000) (ZA3387)
Eurobarometer 55.2 (May-Jun 2001) (ZA3509)
Eurobarometer 56.2 (Oct-Nov 2001) (ZA3627)
Eurobarometer 61 (Feb-Mar 2004) (ZA4056)
Eurobarometer 63.4 (May-Jun 2005) (ZA4411)
Eurobarometer 65.2 (Mar-May 2006) (ZA4506)
Eurobarometer 67.2 (Apr-May 2007) (ZA4530)
Eurobarometer 71.3 (Jun-Jul 2009) (ZA4973)
Eurobarometer 75.1 (2011) (ZA5479)
Eurobarometer 77.2 (2012) (ZA5598)
Eurobarometer 79.3 (2013) (ZA5689)
Eurobarometer 84.2 (2015) (ZA6642)
Eurobarometer 84.3 (2015) (ZA6643)
Eurobarometer 87.1 (2017) (ZA6861)
Eurobarometer 87.2 (2017) (ZA6862)
Eurobarometer 87.3 (2017) (ZA6863)
Eurobarometer 87.4 (2017) (ZA6924)
Eurobarometer 89.1 (2018) (ZA6963)
Eurobarometer 91.2 (2019) (ZA7562)
politische Willensbildung
politische Soziologie
politische Kultur

Sozialpsychologie
Political Process
Elections
Political Sociology
Political Culture

Social Psychology
Eurobarometer
Terrorismus
öffentliche Meinung
Auswirkung
Aufmerksamkeit
Europa
Islamismus
terrorism
public opinion
impact
attention
Europe
islamism
Zdroj: Public Opinion Quarterly, 85, 3, 900-912
Druh dokumentu: Zeitschriftenartikel<br />journal article
ISSN: 1537-5331
DOI: 10.1093/poq/nfab046
Popis: Terrorists aim at influencing audiences beyond their immediate victims, but can only achieve this if an attack receives sufficient public attention. Previous research shows that terrorism can affect public opinion, but these studies are mainly based on emblematic single cases and relate to varying measures of influence, which are difficult to compare. This research focuses on the first-order effect of terrorism: attention. To analyze whether terrorists get attention, we combine a quasi-experimental approach for causal identification with a comparative design. We compile data from Eurobarometer surveys and contrast responses of more than 80,000 individuals surveyed before and after five diverse Islamist attacks in Europe in 2013-2019. Attention to terrorism increases in all targeted countries, regardless of attack size. Yet, while all incidents raise attention to terrorism, only larger attacks exert a meaningful impact across Europe.
Databáze: SSOAR – Social Science Open Access Repository
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