000 01504nam a22001337a 4500
999 _c532809
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100 _aHunter, Lance Y. Meares, Wesley L. Ginn, Martha H. and Hatcher, William
_959790
245 _aPublic administration, local and regional governance, and domestic terrorism
260 _aPublic Administration Review
300 _a 85(6), Nov-Dec, 2025: p.1804-1839
520 _aThis study examines how the nature of public administration and local and regional governance affects domestic terrorism in 73 mixed and democratic countries from multiple regions and levels of development. In conducting a cross-national statistical analysis from 1991 to 2019 with standard political, economic, and social controls, and controlling for endogeneity, we find that domestic terrorism increases when public administration is more partial, biased, corrupt, and unreliable, and as local and regional governments are controlled to a greater extent by unelected bodies. In addition, we find that the nature of public administration and local and regional governance influences the types of institutions that are most likely to be targeted in domestic terror attacks. These findings have important implications in considering how public administration and local and regional governance affect political violence in mixed and democratic regimes.-Reproduced https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/puar.13938
773 _aPublic Administration Review
942 _cAR