Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, a Taylor & Francis Journal (T&F). All Tweets via the Editorial team, and not representative of T&F. RTs are not endorsements.
With that, pleased to introduce your new and improved @DACJournal Editor Dr. @aflemieux. He is innovative and incredible, and he will take us far as a journal! Please give him a follow & your next submission! 7/end
Last tweets from @ginaligon on thoughts of being the DAC editor for past four years: coolest thing Clark McCauley did for this journal was allowing ANY citation format. Encourages interdisciplinary work and makes this journal truly unique. 1/7
I took on this role to discipline myself to learn about other scholars who study terrorism. I stayed in this role because, for 4 years, I got an advanced look at amazing scholarly work about extremism. Thank you for allowing me to serve. 6/7
Readers: finally sat down and reviewed submissions from last month. We have some WILDLY awesome manuscripts coming up: Columbia, repression, protests, and more! Stay tuned for early releases.
Know someone interested in international criminology? Invite them to follow us! Great opportunity for networking and to keep up with new research! (1 follower away from 600! - let’s surpass that threshold!)
Good to see this discourse in @WarOnTheRocks: Some in Nat’l Security circles describe these as “maritime militia.” Implications for gray zone tactics against @USCG and @USNavy
https://t.co/OggIYA1aPp
Doctoral Candidate Michael Logan recognized by @UNOSCCJ as the Outstanding Graduate Student for 2020! In fall, he will join @kennesawstate as Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice. @UNOmaha @CCS_UNO @DACJournal https://t.co/IQpCNF0J6j
@ginaligon@VOX_Pol@galwaygrrl We love those three mentioned as well, but please consider submitting cutting edge research on terrorism, particularly methods through criminology, communications, and psychology lenses because we have the editorial board to review your work!
It is very difficult to get reviewers for academic journals any time, increasingly requests met with anger. Please just decline and recommend alternatives—we understand! But we also owe it to our junior-author submitters to try...
Four new submissions from amazing authors over the weekend! #flatteningthecurve for terrorism researchers means upping the writing! Amazing resilience:-)
This looks really interesting: "“Yes, I can”: what is the role of perceived self-efficacy in violent online-radicalisation processes of “homegrown” terrorists?" By .@LiSchlegel in .@DACJournal https://t.co/4lSiyXkHvN