Distinguished Scholar Lecture: Black Swans and Burstiness
Please
RSVP now for Gary LaFree’s
upcoming Distinguished Scholar-Teacher Lecture at 4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4
in Price George’s Room of Stamp Student Union. A reception will follow.
The event is free and open to
the public (so invite your friends and loved ones) and a reception will follow, but an RSVP should be made to infostart@start.umd.edu.
Gary
is presenting on “Black Swans
and Burstiness: Countering Myths about Terrorism.” He’ll discuss how
terrorism has two characteristics that make it very challenging from a
public policy perspective—its black swan quality and its burstiness.
Black swan incidents are those that fall outside
the realm of regular expectations, have a high impact, and defy
prediction. Good examples include the four coordinated terrorist
attacks on the United States that took place on September 11, 2011. At
the same time, terrorism tends to be bursty; highly concentrated
in time and space.
His
talk will put high profile attacks
like 9/11 into a much broader context by showing how they differ from
the thousands of other attacks that have taken place around the world
since 1970. Thus, in stark contrast to the 9/11 attacks, we will learn
that many terrorist attacks produce no fatalities,
they frequently rely on common, low technology weapons, they do not
involve a great deal of planning, and they are carried out by groups
whose life expectancy is less than a year. At the same time, when
terrorist organizations find methods that work they often
use them employ them rapidly. Balancing the mundane everyday nature of
terrorism with its occasional capacity for mass destruction is a unique
policy challenge of the twenty-first century.
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