The effects of terrorist incidents on public worry of future attacks, views of the police and social cohesion
Contesting the New York Community: From Liminality to the “New Normal” in the Wake of September 11
Liam Fenn and
Ian Brunton-Smith
The British Journal of Criminology, 2021, vol. 61, issue 2, 497-518
Abstract:
Despite a growing body of research examining the psychological effects of terrorist incidents, there remains comparatively little empirical assessment of their impacts on citizens’ worry about further attacks, perceptions of the police or social cohesion. Drawing on interviews with nearly 100,000 London residents, we find higher levels of worry following most domestic attacks. Improvements in overall ratings of the police are tempered by more negative assessments of their ability to handle future threats. We also find that far-right incidents are less closely linked to changes in public ratings of the police and concerns about future attacks compared to Islamic terror attacks. Effects on social cohesion are less predictable. We find reductions in cohesion following some attacks but increases following others.
Keywords: terrorism; public perceptions; policing; social cohesion (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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