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State terror in the U.S.-Latin American interstate regime
Cecilia Menjívar, Nestor Rodríguez
Social and Family Dynamics, T. Denny Sanford School of (SSFD)
Research output
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Contribution to journal
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Article
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peer-review
16
Scopus citations
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Social Sciences
state terror
100%
political violence
54%
regime
44%
terrorism
30%
violence
25%
Latin America
21%
political actor
11%
Military
10%
twenty-first century
9%
civil defense
9%
political interest
8%
campaign
8%
political system
6%
cause
6%
twentieth century
6%
dispute
5%
Law
5%
regional structure
5%
economic elite
4%
local elite
4%
New Age
4%
political group
4%
El Salvador
4%
human rights abuse
4%
psyche
4%
Nicaragua
4%
Guatemala
4%
torture
4%
political structure
4%
genocide
4%
international system
4%
political culture
3%
country of origin
3%
peasant
3%
political elite
3%
causality
3%
Peru
3%
diplomacy
3%
civil war
3%
allies
3%
rationality
3%
tactics
3%
military
3%
surveillance
3%
penalty
3%
village
3%
Mexico
2%
comprehension
2%
developing country
2%
social science
2%
society
2%
anxiety
2%
Group
2%
history
1%
economics
1%
experience
1%
Medicine & Life Sciences
Violence
66%
Latin America
21%
Psychological Power
9%
Political Systems
9%
Civil Defense
7%
Coercion
7%
Dissent and Disputes
6%
Human Rights Abuses
4%
Diplomacy
4%
Genocide
4%
El Salvador
4%
Economics
4%
Nicaragua
4%
Torture
4%
Guatemala
3%
Peru
3%
Punishment
3%
Social Sciences
3%
Armed Conflicts
2%
Mexico
2%
Causality
2%
Developing Countries
2%
Fear
2%
History
1%
Technology
1%
Databases
1%
Growth
1%
Population
1%
Engineering & Materials Science
Violence
90%
Civil defense
8%
Economics
3%
Social sciences
3%
History
3%
Developing countries
2%
Derivatives
2%
Availability
1%