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Well, definitely 9-11 had an immediate and huge impact on funding for all sorts of studies on
terrorism. I guess before that the biggest event was the Oklahoma City bombing. And before that,
I think, for whatever reasons, terrorism research in the behavioral and social sciences seemed
to be falling through the cracks. It wasn’t a large specialization in criminology; it wasn’t a
large specialization in psychology. Even political science wasn’t doing that much. So for
whatever reasons, it was an area that really had been neglected. At first after 9-11, I think
there were certainly lots of issues that were seen as more important than social and behavioral
science, so it took a while for the government to sort of get organized to pay some attention.
And to this day it is actually not a huge amount of funding in this area, so in fact I sometimes
am a little concerned that there hasn’t been a huge amount of work done on processing people
for terrorism-related charges. Just in the federal system right now we have something like 350
people in prison for terrorism-related charges. I don’t think we know that much about them from
the social/behavioral science side. So there’s actually a lot of work still to be done. We had
no idea how much terrorism was domestic versus transnational. And so many of us were surprised
to learn that domestic was much more common. And as criminologists we always say, you know, if
you’re investigating a crime you always want to start close to where it happened. And this turns
out to be very true of terrorism as well; that often times planning, a lot of the events,
happen very close to where the incident happened which I think we didn’t know before we began
collecting data. I don’t think we knew, also, how difficult it is to actually sustain a
terrorist group. We tracked 1,600 terrorist organizations; their average life expectancy was
less than a year. We hear about the success stories. We hear about the Al-Qaedas and the FARCs,
but we are less likely to hear about the many, many organizations that, thankfully, disappear
very rapidly.