Women Chief Executives: The Political Catch-22 of Counterterrorism

Authors

  • Courtney Burns Georgia Southern University
  • Kyle T Kattelman Fairleigh Dickinson University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15664/jtr.1313

Keywords:

Terrorism, Gender Norms, Political Violence, Security, Feminism

Abstract

Abstract: Do women chief executives experience more terrorist activity during their time in office? We are interested in exploring this question given the rise in the study of gender and conflict. We argue that women leaders experience higher levels of terrorist violence due to gender perceptions. Women leaders are perceived as conflict averse. Concomitantly, women leaders who respond forcibly against terrorist agitation run the risk of domestic political costs and possibly additional terrorist recruitment as a result of policies that deviate from gender norms. This political catch-22 results in a higher frequency of terrorist violence. We examine this relationship on instances of domestic terrorism from 1980-2011. The results confirm that women leaders experience terrorist violence more frequently.

Author Biographies

Courtney Burns, Georgia Southern University

Dr. Burns is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Georgia Southern University.

Kyle T Kattelman, Fairleigh Dickinson University

Dr. Kattelman is an Assistant Professor of Political Science in the Department of Criminal Justice, Political Science & International Affairs at Fairleigh Dickinson University.

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Published

2017-05-22

Issue

Section

Articles