TY - BOOK AU - Fellman,Philip Vos AU - Bar-Yam,Yaneer AU - Minai,Ali A. ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Conflict and Complexity: Countering Terrorism, Insurgency, Ethnic and Regional Violence T2 - Understanding Complex Systems, SN - 9781493917051 AV - QC1-QC999 U1 - 621 23 PY - 2015/// CY - New York, NY PB - Springer New York, Imprint: Springer KW - physics KW - Application software KW - System safety KW - Complexity, Computational KW - social sciences KW - Physics KW - Complex Networks KW - Methodology of the Social Sciences KW - Complexity KW - Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences KW - Security Science and Technology N1 - Preface -- Part I: The Theoretical Background -- Modeling Terrorist Networks: The Second Decade -- Complex Systems Studies and Terrorism -- The Psychology of Terrorism -- A Framework for Agent-based Social Simulations of Social Identity Dynamics -- DIME/PMESII Models -- Net-Centric Logistics: Complex systems science aims at moving targets -- Part II: Applications and Case Studies -- A Fractal Concept of War -- Disrupting Terrorist Networks, A Dynamic Fitness Landscape Approach -- Comparison of approaches for adversary modeling decision support for counterterrorism -- The Landscape of Maritime Piracy and the Limits of Statistical Prediction -- Identities, Anonymity and Information Warfare -- Part II: Broader Horizons -- The Geography of Ethnic Violence -- Food Security and Political Instability: From Ethanol and Speculation to Riots and Revolutions -- South African Riots: Repercussion of the Global Food Crisis and US drought -- Conflict in Yemen: From Ethnic Fighting to Food Riots -- Complexity and the Limits of Revolution: What Will Happen to the Arab Spring? N2 - Complexity science affords a number of novel tools for examining terrorism, particularly network analysis and NK-Boolean fitness landscapes as well as other tools drawn from non-linear dynamical systems modeling. This book follows the methodologies of complex adaptive systems research in their application to addressing the problems of terrorism, specifically terrorist networks, their structure and various methods of mapping and interdicting them as well as exploring the complex landscape of network-centric and irregular warfare. A variety of new models and approaches are presented here, including Dynamic Network Analysis, DIME/PMESII models, percolation models and emergent models of insurgency. In addition, the analysis is informed by practical experience, with analytical and policy guidance from authors who have served within the U.S. Department of Defense, the British Ministry of Defence as well as those who have served in a civilian capacity as advisors on terrorism and counter-terrorism UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-1705-1 ER -