The list below is a collective work of art - "i" got it started, "we" keep it growing (send comments, mistakes & additions at contact below) - updated April, 2015
(Alphabetically Listed)
Abdelal, Rawi, Herrera, Yoshiko, Johnston, Iain, and McDermott, Rose. 2006. “Identity as a Variable.” Perspectives on Politics 4 (4): 695-711.
Abouharb, R. and D. Cingranelli (2007). Human Rights and Structural Adjustment. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Aflatooni, A. and M. P. Allen (1991). "Government Sanctions and Collective Political Protest in Periphery and Semiperiphery States - a Time-Series Analysis." Journal of Political & Military Sociology 19(1): 29-45.
Agamben, G. (2005). States of Exception. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.
Alan Heston, Robert Summers and Bettina Aten, Penn World Table Version 7.1, Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices at the University of Pennsylvania, Nov 2012.
Andrews, K. T. 2002. "Movement-Countermovement Dynamics and the Emergence of New Institutions: The Case of "White Flight" Schools in Mississippi." Social Forces 80: 911-936.
Angrist, Joshua D., and Jorn-Steffen Pischke. 2008. Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist's Companion. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Arat, Z. F. (1991). Democracy and Human Rights in Developing Countries. Boulder, Colo., Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Arendt, H. (1951). The Origins of Totalitarianism. New York, Harcourt.
Armstrong, David and Christian Davenport. 2008. “Six Feet Over: Internal War, Battle Deaths and the Influence of the Living on the Dead.” In Stephen M. Saideman and Marie-Joëlle Zahar (eds.) Insecurity in Intra-State Conflicts: Governments, Rebels, and Outsiders. London: Routledge.
Asal, Victor, Matthew Krain, Amanda Murdie, and Brandon Kennedy. Accepted. “Killing the Messenger: Regime Type as a Determinant of Journalist Killing, 1992-2008.” Foreign Policy Analysis. Pages: TBA.
Ashcroft, J. (2001b). Department of Justice Oversight: Preserving Our Freedoms While Defending against Terrorism. Hearing before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary.
Ausderan, Jacob. 2014. “How naming and shaming affects human rights perceptions in the shamed country.” Journal of Peace Research 51(1):81–95.
Ayoub, Phillip. 2010. 'Repressing Protest: Threat and Weakness in the European Context, 1975-1989.' Mobilization: An International Quarterly 15(4): 465–88
Ball, P. (2008). "¿Quién le hizo qué a quién? Planear e implementar un proyecto a gran escala de información en derechos humanos." (originally in English at AAAS) Translated by Beatriz Verjerano. Palo Alto, California: Benetech.
Ball, P. (2005). "On the Quantification of Horror: Field Notes on Statistical Analysis of Human Rights Violations." in Repression and Mobilization, ed. by Christian Davenport, Hank Johnston, and Carol Mueller. Minneapolis: U Minnesota P.
——— (1996). Who Did What to Whom? Planning and Implementing a Large-Scale Human Rights Data Project. Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Ball, P., P. Kobrak, and H. Spirer (1994). “A Definition of Database Design Standards for Human Rights Agencies.” Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science.
——— (1999). State Violence in Guatemala, 1960-1996: A Quantitative Reflection. Washington, D.C.: American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Ball, P., T. Guberek, D. Guzmán, A. Hoover, and M. Lynch (2007). "Assesing Claims of Declining Lethal Violence in Colombia." Benetech. Also available in Spanish - "Para Evaluar Afirmaciones Sobre la Reducción de la Violencia Letal en Colombia."
Banaszak, Lee Ann and Heather L. Ondercin. (2010). "Explaining Movement and Countermovement Events in the Contemporary U.S. Women’s Movement." Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1668884.
Banks, Arthur S., Wilson, Kenneth A. 2013. Cross-National Time-Series Data Archive. Databanks International. Jerusalem, Israel. See: http://www.databanksinternational.com
Barkan, Steven. 1984. “Legal Control of the Southern Civil Rights Movement.” American Sociological Review 49(4): 552-565
Barsh, R. (1993). “Measuring Human Rights: Problems of Methodology and Purpose.” Human Rights Quarterly 15: 87-121.
Bates, Robert H., Avner Greif and Smita Singh. 2002. “Organizing Violence.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 46(5): 599-608.
Bealieu, Emily and Kathleen Cunningham (2010). Dissent, Repression, and Inconsistency. 2010. in Rethinking Violence: States and Non-State Actors in Conflict. Erica Chenoweth and Adria Lawrence, eds. MIT Press.
Beck, Nathaniel, and Jonathan N. Katz. 1995. "What to do (and not to do) with time-series cross-section data." American Political Science Review 89(3): 634-647.
Beck, Nathaniel, Jonathan N. Katz, and Richard Tucker. 1998. "Taking time seriously: Time-series-cross-section analysis with a binary dependent variable." American Journal of Political Science 42(4): 1260-1288.
Bell, Sam, David R. Cingranelli, Amanda Murdie, and Alper Caglayan. 2013. “Coercion, Capacity, and Coordination: Predictors of Political Violence.” Conflict Management and Peace Science. 30(3): 240-262.
Bell, Sam K. Chad Clay, and Amanda Murdie. 2012. "Neighborhood Watch: Spatial Effects of Human Rights INGOs” Journal of Politics.74(2): 1-16.
Bellows, J. and Miguel, E. 2009. “War and local collective action in Sierra Leone.” Journal of Public Economics 93(11-12): 1144-1157.
Benford, R. and Snow, D. 2000. “Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment.” Annual Review of Sociology 26: 611-39.
Berkowitz, Dan, and Douglas Beach. 1993. “News Sources and News Context: The Effect of Routine News, Conflict and Proximity.” Journalism Quarterly 70(1): 4-12.
Berman, Eli, Jacob N. Shapiro, and Joseph H. Felter. "Can hearts and minds be bought? The economics of counterinsurgency in Iraq." Journal of Political Economy 119.4 (2011): 766-819.
Bhavnani, R., Miodownik, D. and Choi, H. J. 2011. “Three Two Tango: Territorial Control and Selective Violence in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 55(1): 133-158.
Biggs, Michael, and Kenneth T. Andrews. 2015. "Protest Campaigns and Movement Success Desegregating the US South in the Early 1960s." American Sociological Review: 416-443.
Bloxham, Donald. 2009. The Final Solution: A Genocide. New York: Oxford University Press.
Bob, Clifford and Sharon Nepstad. 2007. “Kill a Leader, Murder a Movement? Leadership and Assassination in Social Movements.” American Behavioral Scientist 50(10): 1370-1394.
Boehm, Christopher. 1999. Hierarchy in the forest: the evolution of egalitarian behavior. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Bollen, K. A. (1980). "Issues in the Comparative Measurement of Political Democracy." American Sociological Review 45(3): 370-390.
——— (1986). "Political Rights and Political Liberties in Nations - an Evaluation of Human-Rights Measures, 1950 to 1984." Human Rights Quarterly 8(4): 567-591.
Bond, Doug, J. Craig Jenkins, Charles L. Taylor and Kurt Shock. 1997. "Mapping Mass Political Conflict and Civil Society." Journal of Conflict Resolution 41(4): 553-579.
Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. 2001. White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Booth, Bradford, Meyer Kestnbaum and David R. Segal. 2001. “Are Post-Cold War Militaries Postmodern?” Armed Forces and Society 27(3): 319-342
Boudreau, V. (2004). Resisting Dictatorship: Repression and Protest in Southeast Asia. Cambridge, UK; New York, Cambridge Univeristy Press.
Bovard, J. (2003). Terrorism and Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the World of Evil. New York, Palgrave Macmillan.
Box-Steffensmeier, Jan M., & Jones, B. S. 2004. Event History Modeling: A Guide for Social
Scientists. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Bratton, Michael, and Nicholas Van de Walle.1997. Democratic experiments in Africa: Regime transitions in comparative perspective. Cambridge University Press.
Breuer, Anita, Todd Landman, and Dorothea Farquhar. 2014. "Social media and protest mobilization: evidence from the Tunisian revolution." Democratization: 1-29.
Brockett, Charles D. 2005. Political movements and violence in Central America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Bromley, D. G. J. and A. D. Shupe.1983. "Repression and the Decline of Social Movements: The Case of New Religions." Social Movements of the Sixties and Seventies. J. Freeman. New York, Longman.
Brysk, Alison. 1994. “The Politics of Measurement: The Contested Count of the Disappeared in Argentina.” Human Rights Quarterly 16: 676-92.
Brysk, A. and A. Mehta. 2014. “Do rights at home boost rights abroad? Sexual equality and humanitarian foreign policy.” Journal of Peace Research 51(1):97–110.
Bueno de Mesquita, B. (2003). The Logic of Political Survival. Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press.
Bueno de Mesquita, B., G. W. Downs, A. Smith and F. M. Cherif (2005). "Thinking inside the Box: A Closer Look at Democracy and Human Rights." International Studies Quarterly 49(3): 439-457.
Bueno De Mesquita, Bruce and George Downs. 2006. Intervention and democracy. International
Organization, 60(3): 627-649.
Bueno de Mesquita, E. 2005. “Conciliation, Counterterrorism, and Patterns of Terrorist Violence.” International Organization 59: 145-176.
Butler, Christopher, Tali Gluch, and Neil J. Mitchell. 2007. "Security Forces and Sexual Violence: A Cross-National Analysis of a Principal-Agent Argument." Journal of Peace Research 44(6): 669-687.
Cameron, A. Colin, and Pravin K. Trivedi. 2005. Microeconometrics: Methods and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Campbell, Bruce and Arthur Brenner. 2002. Death Squads in Global Perspective: Murder with Deniability. Palgrave MacMillan.
Carey, Sabine. 2010. "The use of repression as a response to domestic dissent." Political Studies 58(1): 167-186.
Carey, Sabine and Steve Poe, eds. 2004. Understanding Human Rights Violations. New York: Ashgate.
Carey, Sabine, Neil Mitchell and Will Lowe. 2013. “States, the Security Sector, and the Monopoly of Violence.” Journal of Peace Research 50(2): 249-258.
Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace and the Legal Resources Foundation. 1999. Breaking the Silence, Building True Peace: A Report on the Disturbances in Matabeleland and the Midlands, 1980–1988. Harare, Zimbabwe: Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace and the Legal Resources Foundation.
Celestino, Mauricio. R., & Gleditsch, Kristian. S. 2013. “Fresh carnations or all thorn, no rose?
Nonviolent campaigns and transitions in autocracies” Journal of Peace Research, 50(3),
385-400.
Cederman, Lars-Erik, Halvard Buhaug, and Jan Ketil Rød. 2009. "Ethno-nationalist dyads and civil war a GIS-based analysis." Journal of Conflict Resolution 53(4): 496-525.
Chapman, A. R. (1996). "A 'Violations Approach' for Monitoring the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights." Human Rights Quarterly. 18: 23-66.
Charny, I. W. (1999). Encyclopedia of Genocide. Santa Barbara, Calif., ABC-CLIO.
Cheibub, José Antonio, Jennifer Gandhi, and James Raymond Vreeland. 2010. “Democracy and Dictatorship Revisited.” Public Choice 143(2-1): 67-101.
Chenoweth, Erica, and Maria J. Stephan. 2011. Why civil resistance works: The strategic logic of nonviolent conflict. New York: Columbia University Press.
Chenoweth, Erica, and Orion Lewis. 2013. ‘‘Unpacking Nonviolent Campaigns: Introducing the NAVCO 2.0 Data.’’ Journal of Peace Research 50 (3) (May): 415-23.
Chenoweth, Erica, and Jay Ulfelder. 2015. "Can Structural Conditions Explain the Onset of Nonviolent Uprisings?" Journal of Conflict Resolution: 1-27.
Chenoweth, Erica and Evan Perkoski. 2015. “Government crackdowns, mass killings, and the trajectories of violent and nonviolent uprisings.” Unpublished working paper, University of Denver.
Churchill, W. and J. Vander Wall (1988). Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret War against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement. Boston, MA, South End Press.
Cingranelli, D. L. and D. L. Richards (1999). “Measuring the Level, Pattern and Sequence of Government Respect for Physical Integrity Rights.” International Studies Quarterly 43(2): 407-418.
Cingranelli, David L., and David L. Richards. 2004. “The Cingranelli-Richards (CIRI) Human Rights Dataset 1980-2004.” http://www.humanrightsdata.com.
——— (1999). "Respect for Human Rights after the End of the Cold War." Journal Of Peace Research 36(5): 511-534.
——-- 2010. ""The Cingranelli and Richards (CIRI) Human Rights Data Project"" Human Rights Quarterly 32.2: pgs 401-424.
Clark, Ann Marie and Kathryn Sikkink. 2013. "Information Effects and Human Rights Data: Is the Good News about Increased Human Rights Information Bad News for Human Rights Measures?" Human Rights Quarterly 35(3):539-568.
Clarke, Kevin. 2007. “A Simple Distribution-free Test for Nonnested Hypotheses.” Political Analysis 15(3): 347-363
Cohen, Dara Kay. 2013. “Explaining Rape during Civil War: Cross-National Evidence (1980- 2009).” American Political Science Review 107(3): 461-477.
Cole, Wade M. 2013. “Does respect for human rights vary across ‘civilizations’ ? A statistical reexamination.” International Journal of Comparative Sociology 54(4):345–381.
——— M. 2013. "Strong Walk and Cheap Talk: The Effect of the International Covenant of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights on Policies and Practices." Social Forces 92(1):165-194.
Cole, Wade M. and Francisco O. Ramirez. 2013. "Conditional Decoupling: Assessing the Impact of National Human Rights Institutions, 1981 to 2004." American Sociological Review 78(4):702-725.
Colgan, Jeff. 2012. "Measuring Revolution." Conflict Management and Peace Science 29(4): 444-467.
Collier, Paul and Anke Hoeffler. 2002. “On the Incidence of Civil War in Africa." Journal of Conflict Resolution 46(1): 13-28.
Conrad, Courtenay R. "Divergent Incentives for Dictators Domestic Institutions and (International Promises Not to) Torture." Journal of Conflict Resolution 58.1 (2014): 34-67.
Conrad, CR. 2011. "Constrained Concessions: Beneficent Dictatorial Responses to the Domestic Political Opposition." International Studies Quarterly
Conrad, Courtenay Ryals, and Will H. Moore. "What stops the torture?." American Journal of Political Science 54.2 (2010): 459-476.
Conrad, Courtenay R., and Emily Hencken Ritter. "Treaties, tenure, and torture: the conflicting domestic effects of international law." The Journal of Politics 75.02 (2013): 397-409.
Conrad, Courtenay R. and Jacquelline H. R. DeMeritt. 2013. "Constrained by the bank and the ballot: Unearned revenue, democracy, and state incentives to repress." Journal of Peace Research 50(1):105-119.
Conrad, Courtenay R., Jillienne Haglund & Will H. Moore. 2013. “Disaggregating Torture Allegations: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT) Country-Year Data,” International Studies Perspectives, 14: 199-220, 2013.
Conrad, Courtenay R., Jillienne Haglund & Will H. Moore. “Torture Allegations as Events Data: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT) Specific Allegation Data.” Journal of Peace Research, 51: 429-438, 2014.
Conrad, Hill & Moore. 2014. "Political Institutions, Plausible Deniability, and the Decision to Hide Torture." Unpublished paper.
Coppedge, Michael. 2013. Democratization and Research Methods. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Corradi, J., P. Weiss Fagen, and M. Garreton, eds. (1992). Fear at the Edge: State Terror and Resistance in Latin America. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Coser, Lewis A. 1956. The Functions of Social Conflict. New York: The Free Press.
Crabtree, Charles, Christopher Fariss and Holger Kern. 2015. “Truth replaced by silence.” Unpublished Manuscript.
Cunningham, D. (2004). There's Something Happening Here. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Cunningham, David E., and Douglas Lemke. 2011. "Beyond Civil War: A Quantitative Analysis of Sub-state Violence." APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper.
Cunningham, Kathleen. 2011. “Divide and Conquer or Divide and Concede: How Do States Respond to Internally Divided Separatists?” American Political Science Review 105: 275-297.
Cunningham, Kathleen Gallagher, and Nils B. Weidmann. 2010. "Shared Space: Ethnic Groups, State Accommodation, and Localized Conflict." International Studies Quarterly 54(4):1035-1054.
Dallin, A. and G. W. Breslauer (1970). Political Terror in Communist Systems. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press.
Davenport, Christian. 1996. “The Weight of the Past: Exploring Lagged Determinants of
Political Repression.” Political Research Quarterly 49(2): 377-403.
Davenport, Christian and David Armstrong. 2004. “Contingency, Inherency and the Onset of Civil War.” Unpublished Manuscript.
Davenport, C. (2010). Media Bias, Perspective and State Repression: The Black Panther Party. New York: Cambridge University Press.
——— (2009). "Regimes, Repertoires and State Repression" - Swiss Political Science Review 15(2): 377-385.
——— (2007a). State Repression and the Domestic Democratic Peace. New York: Cambridge University Press.
——— (2007b). “State Repression and the Tyrannical Peace.” Journal of Peace Research.
———. 2007a. “State Repression and Political Order.” Annual Review of Political Science 10:
1-23.
———. 2007b. State Repression and the Domestic Democratic Peace. New York: Cambridge University Press.
——— (2004). "The Promise of Democratic Pacification: An Empirical Assessment." International Studies Quarterly 48(3): 539-560.
——— ed. 2000a. Paths to State Repression: Human Rights Violations and Contentious Politics. Boulder: Rowman & Littlefield. 2000.
——— (1999). "Human Rights and the Democratic Proposition." Journal Of Conflict Resolution 43(1): 92-116.
——— (1998). "Liberalizing Event or Lethal Episode: An Empirical Assement of How National Elections Effect the Suppression of Political and Civil Liberties." Social Science Quarterly 79(2): 321-340.
——— (1997). "From Ballots to Bullets: An Empirical Assessment of How National Elections Influence State Uses of Political Repression." Electoral Studies 16(4): 517-540.
——— (1996). "''Constitutional Promises'' and Repressive Reality: A Cross-National Time-Series Investigation of Why Political and Civil Liberties Are Suppressed." Journal Of Politics 58(3): 627-654.
——— (1996). "The Weight of the Past: Exploring Lagged Determinants of Political Repression." Political Research Quarterly 49(2): 377-403.
——— (1995). "Assessing the Military's Influence on Political Repression." Journal Of Political & Military Sociology 23: 119-144.
——— (1995). "Multi-Dimensional Threat Perception and State Repression: An Inquiry into Why States Apply Negative Sanctions." American Journal Of Political Science 39(3): 683-713.
——. 2005. "Understanding Covert Repressive Action." Journal of Conflict Resolution 49(1): 120-140.
Davenport, C. Sarah A. Soule, and David Armstrong. “Protesting While Black: Racial Bias in the Policing of American Protest” American Sociological Review 76(1): 152-178.
Davenport, C. and D. A. Armstrong II (2004). "Democracy and the Violation of Human Rights: A Statistical Analysis from 1976-1996." American Journal of Political Science 48(3): 538-554.
Davenport, C. and P. Ball (2002). "Views to a Kill: Exploring the Implications of Source Selection in the Case of Guatemalan State Terror, 1977-1996." Journal of Conflict Resolution 46(3): 427-450.
Davenport, Christian, Carol Mueller and Hank Johnston, eds. 2005. Repression and Mobilization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Davenport, C. and M. Eads (2001). "Cued to Coerce or Coercing Cues? An Exploration of Dissident Framing and Its Relationship to Political Repression." Mobilization 6(2): 151-171.
Davis, Darren. 2007. Negative Liberty. Public Opinion and the Terrorist Attacks on America. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Davis, G. F., McAdam, D., Scott, W. R., and Zald, Mayer (eds.). 2005. Social movements and organization theory. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Daxecker, Ursula E. and Michael L. Hess. 2013. "Repression Hurts: Coercive Government Responses and the Demise of Terrorist Campaigns." British Journal of Political Science 43(03):559-577.
DeMeritt, Jacquelline H. R. 2014. “Delegating Death: Military Intervention and Government Killing,” Journal of Conflict Research.
———. 2012. “International Organizations and Government Killing: Does Naming and Shaming Save Lives?” International Interactions 38(5): 597-621.
DeMeritt, Jacquelline H. R. and Joseph K. Young. 2013. “A Political Economy of Human Rights: Oil, Natural Gas, and State Incentives to Repress”. Conflict Management & Peace Science 30(2): 99-120.
DeMeritt, Jacquelline H. R. and Courtenay R. Conrad. 2013. “Constrained by the Bank and the Ballot: Unearned Revenue, Democracy, and State Incentives to Repress”. Journal of Peace Research 50(1): 105-119.
DeMeritt, Jacquelline H. R. and Joseph K. Young. 2013. "A political economy of human rights: Oil, natural gas, and state incentives to repress." Conflict Management and Peace Science 30(2):99-120.
De Swann, A. (1977). "Terror as Government Service." Repression and Repressive Violence: Proceedings of the 3rd International Working Conference on Violence and Non-Violent Action in Industrialized Societies. M. Hoefnagels. Amsterdam, Swets & Zeitlinger: 194 p.
della Porta, D., A. Peterson and H. Reiter, eds. (2006). The Policing of Transnational Protest. Aldershot, Ashgate.
della Porta, D. and H. Reiter (1998). Policing Protest: The Control of Mass Demonstrations in Western Democracies. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.
della Porta, Donatella. 1995. Social Movements, Political Violence, and the State. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
della Porta, Donatella and Gary Lafree. 2012. “Radicalization and (De)Radicalization.” International Journal of Conflict and Violence 6(1): 4-10.
Denemark, R. a. H. L. (1984). "South African State Terror: The Costs of Continuing Repression." The State as Terrorist: The Dynamics of Governmental Violence and Repression. M. S. a. G. Lopez. Westport, Greenwood Press.
Donner, F. J. (1990). Protectors of Privilege: Red Squads and Police Repression in Urban America. Berkeley, University of California Press.
Dugan, Laura, and Erica Chenoweth. 2012. "Moving Beyond Deterrence The Effectiveness of Raising the Expected Utility of Abstaining from Terrorism in Israel." American Sociological Review 77(4): 597-624.
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Duvall, R. and M. Stohl (1988). "Governance by Terror." The Politics of Terrorism. M. Stohl. New York, M. Dekker: xviii, 622 p.
Earl, J. S. (2003). "Tanks, Tear Gas and Taxes: Toward a Theory of Movement Repression." Sociological Theory 21(1): 44-68.
Earl, Jennifer. 2004. “Controlling Protest: New Directions for Research on the Social Control of Protest.” Research in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change, Special Issue onAuthority in Contention 25: 55-83.
Earl, Jennifer. 2005 “You Can Beat the Rap, But You Can’t Beat the Ride: Bringing ArrestsBack into Research on Repression.”
Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change
26:101-139.
——--. 2011. “Political Repression: Iron Fists, Velvet Gloves, and Diffuse Control”. Annual Review of Sociology 37: 261–284.
——--. 2011. “Protest Arrests and Future Protest Participation: The 2004 Republican National Convention Arrestees and the Effects of Repression.”
Studies in Law, Politics,and Society 45: 141-173
Earl, Jennifer. 2009 “Information Access and Protest Policing Post-9/11: Studying the Policingof the 2004 Republican National Convention”
American Behavioral Scientist
53(1): 44-60.
Earl, J., S. A. Soule, and J. D. McCarthy. (2003). “Protests Under Fire? Explaining Protest Policing.” American Sociological Review 69:581-606.
Earl, Jennifer and Alan Schussman. 2004. “Cease and Desist: Repression, Strategic Voting andthe 2000 Presidential Election.” Mobilization
9(2): 188-202
Earl, J. S. and S. A. Soule. (2006). “Seeing Blue: A Police-Centered Explanation of Protest Policing.” Mobilization 11(2): 145-164.
Earl, J. S. and Sarah A. Soule. “The Impacts of Repression: The Effect of Police Presence and Action on Subsequent Rates of Protest.” Research
in Social Movements, Conflicts, and Change 30: 75-113.
Eck, Kristine & Lisa Hultman (2007). ‘One-Sided Violence Against Civilians in War: Insights from New Fatality Data’, Journal of Peace Research, 44(2): 233-246.
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Eckstein, Harry. 1965. "On the etiology of internal wars." History and Theory 4(2): 133-163.
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Enders, Walter, and Todd Sandler. 2011. The political economy of terrorism. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Enders, Walter. 2004. Applied econometric time series. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Escribà-Folch, Abel. 2013. 'Repression, Political Threats, and Survival under Autocracy.' International Political Science Review 34(5): 543–60
Fariss, Christopher J. “Respect for Human Rights has Improved Over Time: Modeling the Changing Standard of Accountability” American Political Science Review 108(2):297-318 (May 2014).
Fariss, Christopher J. and Keith E. Schnakenberg. “Measuring Mutual Dependence Between State Repressive Actions” Journal of Conflict Resolution 58(6):1003-1032 (September 2014).
Fearon, James and David Laitin. 2003. “Ethnicity, insurgency, and civil war.” American Political Science Review 97(1): 75-90.
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——— 1993. “Accounting For Genocide After 1945: Theories and Some Findings." International Journal of Group Rights 1: 79-106.
Ferrara, F. (2003). "Why Regimes Create Disorder: Hobbes Dilemma During a Rangoon Summer." Journal Of Conflict Resolution 47(3): 302-325.
Ferree, Myra. 2005. “Soft Repression: Ridicule, Stigma, and Silencing in Gender-Based Movements. In Christian Davenport, Hank Johnston and Carol Mueller (eds.) Repression and Mobilization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
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Fjelde, Hanne, and Lisa Hultman. 2013. "Weakening the Enemy A Disaggregated Study of Violence against Civilians in Africa." Journal of Conflict Resolution: 1230-1257.
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Francisco R. (1996). "The Relationship between Coercion and Protest: An Empirical Evaluation in Three Coercive States." The Journal of Conflict Resolution 39(2): 263-82.
Francisco, Ron. 1996. "Coercion and Protest: An Empirical Test in Two Democratic States." American Journal of Political Science 40(4): 1179-1204.
———. 2004. “After the Massacre: Mobilization in the Wake of Harsh Repression.” Mobilization 9(2): 107-126.
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Franklin, James. 2008. "Shame on you." International Studies Quarterly 52(1): 187-211.
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Gassebner, Martin, Michael J. Lamla, and James Raymond Vreeland. 2013. "Extreme Bounds
of Democracy." Journal of Conflict Resolution 57(2): 171-197.
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