Bjørgo, T. (2005). Root Causes of Terrorism: Myths, Reality and Ways Forward. Taylor and Francis. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bilibrary/detail.action?docID=199597
Cronin, A. K. (n.d.). How terrorism ends: understanding the decline and demise of terrorist campaigns. Princeton University Press. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bilibrary/detail.action?docID=517059
David Kilcullen. (2016). Internationale. In Blood year: Islamic State and the failures of the war on terror (pp. 111–125). Hurst.
David, Steven R. (2003). Israel’s policy of targeted killing. Ethics & International Affairs, 17(1). https://search.proquest.com/docview/200504975?OpenUrlRefId=info:xri/sid:primo&accountid=142923
English, R. (2009). Terrorism: how to respond. Oxford University Press.
Hart, P. ’t, Boin, A., Stern, E., & Sundelius, B. (2005). How to deal with crisis: lessons for prudent leadership. In The Politics of crisis management: public leadership under pressure (pp. 137–157). Cambridge University Press.
Hoffman, B. (2017). Inside terrorism: Vol. Columbia studies in terrorism and irregular warfare (Third Edition). Columbia University Press.
Jason Burke. (2015). Al-quaeda and the origins of ISIS. In The new threat : from Islamic militancy (pp. 56–79). Bodley Head.
Jensen, R. B. (2014). The Pre-1914 Anarchist "Lone Wolf” Terrorist and Governmental Responses. Terrorism and Political Violence, 26(1), 86–94.
Max Abrahms. (2006). Why Terrorism Does Not Work. International Security, 31(2), 42–78. https://www.jstor.org/stable/4137516
Nesser, P. (2018). Islamist terrorism in Europe (Revised and updated edition). Hurst & Company. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bilibrary/detail.action?pq.origsite=primo&docID=5497201
Neumann, P. (2016). Foreign fighters. In Radicalized: new jihadists and the threat to the west (pp. 85–109). I.B. Tauris.
Parker, T. (2018). Avoiding the terrorist trap: why respect for human rights is the key to defeating terrorism. World Scientific.
Parker, T., & Sitter, N. (2016). The Four Horsemen of Terrorism: It’s Not Waves, It’s Strains. Terrorism and Political Violence, 28(2), 197–216. https://doi.org/10.1080/09546553.2015.1112277
Rapoport, D. C. (1990). Sacred terror : a contemporary example from Islam. In W. Reich (Ed.), Origins of terrorism : psychologies, ideologies, theologies, states of mind (pp. 103–130). Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
Rapport, D. C. (2012). The four waves of modern terrorism. In Terrorism studies: a reader (pp. 41–60). Routledge.
Richardson, L. (2007). The three R’s: revenge, renown and reaction. In What terrorists want: understanding the enemy, containing the threat (pp. 71–103). Random HouseTrade Paperbacks.
Sageman, M. (20080101). Leaderless Jihad : Terror Networks in the Twenty-First Century. University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bilibrary/detail.action?docID=3441784
Sitter, N., & Parker, T. (2014). Fighting Fire with Water: NGOs and Counterterrorism Policy Tools. Global Policy, 5(2), 159–168.
Thomas Hegghammer. (2010). The Rise of Muslim Foreign Fighters: Islam and the Globalization of Jihad. International Security, 35(3), 53–94. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40981252
Weinberg, L. (2012). The end of terrorism? Routledge. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bilibrary/detail.action?docID=958770