Results 231 to 240 of about 38,611 (262)
Cyber-biological convergence: a systematic review and future outlook. [PDF]
Elgabry M, Johnson S.
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Deterrence by denial in cyberspace
Journal of Strategic Studies, 2021Many scholars and practitioners are unconvinced that cyber deterrence is possible. This article aims to demonstrate why some of this skepticism is misplaced, as well as provide greater clarity and ...
Erica D. Borghard, Shawn W. Lonergan
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Testing Deterrence by Denial: Experimental Results from Criminology
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 2020Deterrence by denial is gaining attention as a counter-terrorism strategy. Yet there are formidable obstacles to testing its empirical validity.
Janice Gross Stein, Ron Levi
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Doctrine «deterrence by denial» in modern diplomacy
Diplomaticheskaja sluzhba (Diplomatic Service), 2021The security environment today is more complex and demanding than at any time since the end of the cold war, which increases the need for States and their coalitions to ensure the reliability and effectiveness of deterrence and defense policies. The issue of deterrence is becoming central to the national security policies of the great Powers, and ...
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State of (Deterrence by) Denial
The Washington Quarterly, 2019Great power competition is all the rage. The 2017 National Security Strategy (NSS) and the 2018 National Defense Strategy (NDS) both argue that the United States’ central challenge is the reemergen...
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Terrorism and Deterrence by Denial
2008Conventional wisdom holds that terrorists and terrorism cannot be deterred: terrorists do not fear punishment or death, nor do they possess the territory and population of a state, and they are therefore immune from psychological coercion via threat of retaliation.
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Legal Deterrence by Denial: Strategic Initiative and International Law in the Gray Zone
Texas National Security ReviewAbstract: International security competition in the twenty-first century is likely to remain largely within the “gray zone”—a category of aggressive activities that threaten core aspects of statehood while avoiding the threshold of armed force that has traditionally legitimized military retaliation in self-defense.
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Deterrence by Denial and Resilience Building
2023James Pamment, Björn Palmertz
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International security competition in the twenty-first century is likely to remain largely within the “gray zone”—a category of aggressive activities that threaten core aspects of statehood while avoiding the threshold of armed force that has traditionally legitimized military retaliation in self-defense.
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