All Stories

  1. The forgotten front: Patron-client relationships in counterinsurgency
  2. Who supports suicide terrorism in Indonesia?
  3. Rohingya: Victims of a Great Game East
  4. Who Supports Suicide Terrorism in Bangladesh? What the Data Say
  5. The Army and Democracy: Military Politics in Pakistan. By Aqil Shah. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2014. 416 pp. ISBN: 9780674728936 (cloth).Army and Nation: The Military and Indian Democracy since Independence. By Steven I. Wilkinson. ...
  6. Fighting to the end: the Pakistan army's way of war. By C. Christine Fair
  7. Pakistan's Enduring Challenges
  8. Pakistani Political Communication and Public Opinion on US Drone Attacks
  9. Pakistan’s Army: Running and Ruining a Country
  10. Author’s Response: The United States Needs a New Policy toward Pakistan
  11. Fighting to the End
  12. Born an Insecure State
  13. Seeking Security through Alliances
  14. Introduction to the Pakistan Army’s Way of War
  15. Can Strategic Culture Explain the Pakistan Army’s Persistent Revisionism?
  16. Pakistan’s Quest for Strategic Depth
  17. The Army’s Defense of Pakistan’s “Ideological Frontiers”
  18. Seeking Security under a Nuclear Umbrella
  19. The Army’s Strategic Culture and Implications for International Security
  20. Is the Past Prologue?
  21. India under the Pakistan Army’s Gaze
  22. Jihad under the Nuclear Umbrella
  23. Pakistani Opposition to American Drone Strikes
  24. Policing Insurgencies
  25. Introduction
  26. Drones, spies, terrorists, and second-class citizenship in Pakistan
  27. Using Manpower Policies to Transform the Force and Society: The Case of the Pakistan Army
  28. Securing Indian Interests in Afghanistan Beyond 2014
  29. Afghanistan, Pakistan and Strategic Change. Adjusting Western Regional Policy, Joachim Krause et Charles King Mallory iv (dir.), 2014, New York, Routledge, 336 p.
  30. Insights from a Database of Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen Militants
  31. India's Stalled Internal Security Reforms1
  32. Lives on the Line
  33. Feroz Hassan Khan,Eating Grass: The Making of the Pakistani Bomb
  34. BUSTING OUT
  35. The structural origins of authoritarianism in Pakistan
  36. Popular Muslim Attitudes towards Violent Islamic Groups: The Case of Pakistan
  37. The US–Pakistan relations after a decade of the war on terror
  38. A state in flux: Pakistan in the context of national and regional change
  39. Prospects for effective internal security reforms in India
  40. Political Islam Observed by Frédéric Volpi: A review Political Islam Observed. By Frédéric Volpi. New York: Columbia University Press, 2010. 244 pp. $34.50 Cloth
  41. Pakistan in 2011
  42. Faithful Education: Madrassahs in South Asia. By Ali Riaz. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2008. 289 pp. $59.95 (cloth).
  43. Lashkar-e-Tayiba and the Pakistani State
  44. Why the Pakistan army is here to stay: prospects for civilian governance
  45. Under the Shrinking U.S. Security Umbrella: India's End Game in Afghanistan?
  46. The Changing Pakistan Army Officer Corps
  47. Pakistan in 2010
  48. The Militant Challenge in Pakistan
  49. Islam, Militancy, and Politics in Pakistan: Insights From a National Sample
  50. “Clear, Build, Hold, Transfer”: Can Obama's Afghan Strategy Work?
  51. Students Islamic Movement of India and the Indian Mujahideen: An Assessment
  52. Understanding Support for Islamist Militancy in Pakistan
  53. Pakistan's War Within
  54. Editors' Note
  55. Time for Sober Realism: Renegotiating U.S. Relations with Pakistan
  56. Pakistan's Democracy: The Army's Quarry?
  57. Islamist Militancy in Bangladesh: A Complex Web. By Ali Riaz. New York: Routledge, 2007. xiii, 172 pp. $160.00 (cloth).
  58. Managing Editor's Note
  59. Determinants of Popular Support for Iran's Nuclear Program: Insights from a Nationally Representative Survey
  60. Consenting to a Child's Decision to Join aJihad: Insights from a Survey of Militant Families in Pakistan
  61. Treading on Hallowed Ground
  62. Introduction
  63. The Golden Temple
  64. Fortifying Pakistan: The Role of U.S. Internal Security Assistance, by C. Christine Fair and Peter Chalk (eds)
  65. Pakistan's Relations with Central Asia: Is Past Prologue?
  66. The educated militants of Pakistan: implications for Pakistan's domestic security
  67. The cohesion and stability of Pakistan: an introduction to the special issue
  68. Who Are Pakistan's Militants and Their Families?
  69. India and Iran: New Delhi's Balancing Act
  70. QUINTAN WIKTOROWICZ Radical Islam Rising: Muslim Extremism in the West (Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2005). Pp. 245. $75.00 cloth. $26.95 paper
  71. Militant Recruitment in Pakistan: A New Look at the Militancy-Madrasah Connection
  72. United States Internal Security Assistance to Pakistan1
  73. Who Supports Terrorism? Evidence from Fourteen Muslim Countries
  74. US–Indian Army-to-Army Relations: Prospects for Future Coalition Operations
  75. DIASPORA INVOLVEMENT IN INSURGENCIES: INSIGHTS FROM THE KHALISTAN AND TAMIL EELAM MOVEMENTS
  76. Learning to Think the Unthinkable: Lessons from India’s Nuclear Tests
  77. Reciprocal Obligations: Managing Policy Responses to Prenatal Substance Exposure
  78. Military Operations in Urban Areas: The Indian Experience
  79. Structure and conformation of spin-labeled methyl L-phenylalanate and L-phenylalanine determined by electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopy
  80. The Supply Side Drivers of Recruitment in the Pakistan Army
  81. Pakistani Acquisition of Political Information About Drones
  82. Pakistan's Internal Security Environment
  83. India in Afghanistan and Beyond: Opportunities and Constraints
  84. Prospects for Effective Internal Security Reforms in India
  85. Pakistan
  86. Chapter 5. Democracy on the Leash in Pakistan
  87. Iran's Interests in Afghanistan Post 2014
  88. Why the Pakistan Army is Here to Stay: Prospects for Civilian Governance?
  89. Pakistan’s Strategic Use of Lashkar-e-Taiba: It’s Not Just Kashmir
  90. Has the Pakistan Army Islamized? What the Data Suggest
  91. Sharia, Piety and Maslak: Support for Sectarian Violence in Pakistan
  92. Exposure to the Elite Narrative: Explaining Pakistani Public Opinion and American Drone Attacks
  93. Pakistani Conceptualization of Shari'a and Support for Militancy and Democratic Values: A New Empirical Approach
  94. Using Manpower Policies to Transform the Force and Society: The Case of the Pakistan Army
  95. The Drone War: Pakistani Public Opposition to American Drone Strikes in Pakistan
  96. Faith or Doctrine? Islam and Support for Political Violence in Pakistan
  97. Iranians and the Bomb: Religion and Support for or Opposition to the Development of Nuclear Weapons
  98. Leader-Led Jihad in Pakistan: Lashkar-E-Taiba and the 2008 Mumbai Attack
  99. Busting Out? Iranians and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
  100. Poverty and Support for Militant Politics: Evidence from Pakistan
  101. Democratic Values and Support for Militancy: Evidence from a National Survey of Pakistan
  102. Chapter 3. The Future of the American Drone Program in Pakistan
  103. Madaaris in Pakistan: Producing Better Educated Students Who are More Socially Intolerant and Inclined to Support Islamist Violence?
  104. Iranians and the Bomb: Elite Cues and Support and Opposition to the Development of Nuclear Weapons
  105. Consenting to a Child's Decision to Join a Jihad: Insights from a Survey of Militant Families in Pakistan
  106. Militants in the Kargil conflict: myths, realities, and impacts