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An apolitical risk assessment of the 2024 US elections: The threat of widespread riots and significant business disruption

Mike Blyth, Antony Sherlock, Sula Mpande and Daniel Beale
Additional contact information
Mike Blyth: Sigma7, USA
Antony Sherlock: Apple, UK
Sula Mpande: Head of Crisis and Resilience Team, USA
Daniel Beale: Halliburton, USA

Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning, 2024, vol. 18, issue 1, 6-38

Abstract: Civil disorder has always plagued humanity, with violence being triggered by real or perceived grievances, rumours and speculation, and internal or external agitators. The risk to people, communities, businesses and the rule of law is not isolated to a particular country or society. The propensity for violence and how it is incited is, however, an evolving threat with the advent of the ‘modern riot’. The causes of violence centre on economic and social injustice, sports- and event-related riots, a reaction to police or security forces and political unrest. As the US nears the contentious 2024 elections, the failing trust in the three branches of government combined with external global tensions and conflict, threats from domestic extremist groups, a rising acceptance of violence as a means of settling political disagreements, hostile nation actors and international terror groups that exploit societal instability create fertile conditions for widespread violence. Exacerbating these factors are the risks from artificial intelligence (AI) deepfake, rapid mass communications, the citizen journalist, prominent influencers amplifying grievances and inflammatory media reporting. This convergence of exacerbators and accelerants for political discord offers the potential for serious security risks and significant business disruption.

Keywords: 2024 elections; deepfake, AI, riots, civil disorder, flashpoints, social unrest (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: M1 M10 M12 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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