2004
DOI: 10.1300/j073v15n02_05
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The Impacts of Terrorism

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Cited by 39 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…The strong adjusted positive association between perceived safety at work and 2 of the 3 predictors investigated—perceived priority given to security measures at work and knowledge of evacuation procedures—is both logical and broadly consistent with earlier research on related topics 16 19 The clear dose-response relationship within both predictors supports the internal validity and strength of the associations.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The strong adjusted positive association between perceived safety at work and 2 of the 3 predictors investigated—perceived priority given to security measures at work and knowledge of evacuation procedures—is both logical and broadly consistent with earlier research on related topics 16 19 The clear dose-response relationship within both predictors supports the internal validity and strength of the associations.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Limited research has been done, however, to assess how people’s perception of safety is linked to views of security-related issues and interventions, especially in connection to terrorism. One study at the University of Tennessee reported that more than 70% of faculty and students felt that “the events of September 11 had made airports safer from terrorism.” 16 A study of attendees at a major sporting event concluded that venue-specific characteristics such as security checks and the presence of police was important for safety perception 17 . Somewhat tangentially, a study on risk perception and attitudes toward homeland security found that the perceived effectiveness of interventions was negatively associated with perceived intrusiveness 18 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Low vacationers' confidence is contributed by the perceived risk of going on vacation. This issue is concurrent with the findings by Chen & Noriega (2004); Lepp & Gibson (2003) on the effect on cancellation of vacation after the Nine-Eleven incident, fear of getting sick or inadequacy of health-care. The environmental situation influences the vacation decision among people.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 60%
“…So far, the studies have been conducted in the areas of social sciences (Agarwal, Page, and Mawby, 2021;Malleka, Booyens, and Hoogendoorn, 2022), business and management (Zou & Meng, 2020;Tarulevicz and Ooi, 2021), and environmental sciences (Tang, Wu, Zheng, & Lyu, 2018). In addition to the general issues of tourism safety and security, a significant part of the research focuses particularly on recreation safety (Wu, 2015;Karvunis & Kapilevich, 2017;Cheng, Chen, Hong & Chen, 2022), managing tourism safety and risk (Coxon, Dimmock & Wilks, 2007;Kasum, Žanić Mikuličić & Kolić, 2018;Hamm & Su, 2021), food security (Pirani & Arafat, 2016;Addinsall, Weiler, Scherrer & Glencross, 2017;Huang & Tsai, 2021), environmental security (Irene, aet al, 2010;Hall, 2013;Casares Blanco, Fernández-Aracil & Ortuño-Padilla, 2019), tourism ecological security (Xu, Liu, Li & Zhong, 2017;Tang, Wu, Zheng, Lyu, 2018;Yang, Jia, Wang & Zhang, 2021), tourists' safety perception (Wang, 2014;Peters & Papathanassis, 2019;Zou &Meng, 2020;Wang, Tarin, Liu, & Zhengf, 2022), impact of terrorism on safety (Chen & Noriega, 2004;Korstanje, 2017;Asongu & Nwachukwu, 2019;Agarwal, Page & Mawby, 2021), corporate security in tourism (Repnik & Antošová, 2021), and community safety (Cheng, Fang & Yin, 2022;Yamada, Heo, King & Fu, 2011).…”
Section: Previous Research On Tourism Safety and Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%