National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Can Club Model Explain the Rise of the Islamic State?
Matoulková, Kristýna ; Cingl, Lubomír (advisor) ; Korbel, Václav (referee)
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant has become a major threat of the con- temporary period. It is therefore important to find the efficient way how to fight this group successfully. Besides political, social and psychological approaches to the counter-terrorism topic, there is also the club model in economics of reli- gion that can surprisingly well model behaviour of radical extremist units and that proposes implications for counter-terrorism policy. It implies that terrorist organizations that provide social services can function as clubs. They introduce prohibitions such as dress code to ensure active participation and use sacrifices to screen out free-riders. Both of these practices make these groups unusually successful. This thesis has two main goals. Firstly, we show that ISIL has all the necessary attributes to fit into the club model framework, which we confirm by suggestive evidence that this organization uses escalated violence to select loyal members. Secondly, based on the club logic, we claim that efficient pol- icy measures to fight ISIL should be focused on improving provisions of public goods in Syria and Iraq, creating better paid jobs and encouraging education. JEL Classification D2, H41, H56, O17, Z12 Keywords ISIL, club model, social services, prohibitions, sacrifices, violence...
Buried and sacrified iron. Hoards of iron in Early Europe
Pleiner, Radomír
The problem of hoards of iron objects destined for futher use but not uncovered. The other category involves hoards on sacrified assemblages to be forever buried: in this group are large sacrifices in lakes, river and moats of sanctuaries.

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