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Historical Dictionary of Terrorism Third Edition

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BIBLIOGRAPHY • 759Chumakova, Maria. “Colombia between Two Fires: Drug Business and <strong>Terrorism</strong>.”International Affairs: A Russian Journal <strong>of</strong> World Politics, Diplomacy& International Relations 51, no. 2 (2005): 101–8.Corr, Edwin G., and Courtney E. Prisk. “El Salvador: The FMLN Insurgencyand the Prospects for Democracy and Peace.” In Low Intensity Conflict:Old Threats in a New World, edited by Edwin G. Corr and Stephen Sloan,223–53. Boulder, Colo.: Westview, 1992.Cupples, Julie, and Irving Larios. “Gender, Elections, <strong>Terrorism</strong>: The GeopoliticalEnframing <strong>of</strong> the 2001 Nicaraguan Elections.” Political Geography24, no. 3 (March 2005): 317–39.Dashboard. “Mexico’s Other Combatants.” Time 170, no. 13 (24 September2007): 19.DeCórdoba, José. “Mexican Gas Pipelines Attacked Again.” Wall Street Journal:Eastern <strong>Edition</strong> 250, no. 60 (11 September 2007): A12.Demarest, Ge<strong>of</strong>frey B. “Redefining the School <strong>of</strong> the Americas.” Military Review74, no. 10 (October 1994): 43–51.Dickey, Christopher. “Behind the Death Squads: Who They Are, How TheyWork, and Why No One Can Stop Them.” The New Republic 189 (26 December1983): 16–21.Eccarius-Kelly, Vera. “Counterterrorism Policies and the Revolutionary Movement<strong>of</strong> Tupac Amaru: The Unmasking <strong>of</strong> Peru’s National Security State.”In Countering <strong>Terrorism</strong> and Insurgency in the 21st Century: InternationalPerspectives (Vol. 3: Lessons from the Fight against <strong>Terrorism</strong>), edited byJames J. F. Forest, 463–84. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2007.Falc<strong>of</strong>f, Mark. Modern Chile: 1970-1989: A Critical History. New Brunswick,N.J.: Transaction, 1989.Feldmann, Andreas E., and Maiju Perala. “Reassessing the Causes <strong>of</strong> Nongovernmental<strong>Terrorism</strong> in Latin America.” Latin American Politics and Society46, no. 2 (Summer 2004): 101–32.Filippone, Robert. “The Medellin Cartel: Why We Can’t Win the Drug War.”Studies in Conflict and <strong>Terrorism</strong> 17, no. 4 (October–December 1994):323–44.Fishel, John T. “Coca, Cocaine, Sicarios, and Senderistas.” Low Intensity Conflict& Law Enforcement 3, no. 1 (1994): 31–45.Fontaine, Roger W. <strong>Terrorism</strong>: The Cuban Connections. New York: CraneRussak, 1988.Frankland, Erich G. “Under the Gun in El Salvador: The Evolving Relationshipbetween the Military and Democracy.” Low Intensity Conflict & LawEnforcement 3, no. 1 (1994): 104–35.Garabedian, John H. “A Narrative Account <strong>of</strong> the Capture <strong>of</strong> Abimael GuzmanBased on Press Reporting.” Low Intensity Conflict & Law Enforcement 2,no. 2 (1993): 370 et seq.

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