The Arab Spring: A simple compartmental model for the dynamics of a revolution
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Wendy Pearlman,et al. Emotions and the Microfoundations of the Arab Uprisings , 2013, Perspectives on Politics.
[2] Yamir Moreno,et al. Dynamics of rumor spreading in complex networks. , 2003, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[3] Bob Feldman. Somalia: amidst the rubble, a vibrant telecommunications infrastructure , 2007 .
[4] P ? ? ? ? ? ? ? % ? ? ? ? , 1991 .
[5] Clay Shirky. The political power of social media: Technology, the public sphere, and political change , 2011 .
[6] Ken Menkhaus,et al. Governance without Government in Somalia: Spoilers, State Building, and the Politics of Coping , 2007, International Security.
[7] Emanuela Paoletti,et al. Libya: Roots of a Civil Conflict , 2011 .
[8] D. Boyd,et al. The Arab Spring| The Revolutions Were Tweeted: Information Flows during the 2011 Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions , 2011 .
[9] Christoforos Hadjichrysanthou,et al. Approximating evolutionary dynamics on networks using a Neighbourhood Configuration model. , 2012, Journal of theoretical biology.
[10] Alexandra Dunn,et al. Unplugging a Nation: State Media Strategy during Egypt's January 25 Uprising , 2011 .
[11] Duncan J Watts,et al. A simple model of global cascades on random networks , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[12] Andrew Wedeman. Enemies of the State: Mass Incidents and Subversion in China , 2009 .
[13] Cathy Lisa Schneider,et al. Violence and State Repression , 2011 .
[14] Ingemar Nåsell,et al. Stochastic models of some endemic infections. , 2002, Mathematical biosciences.
[15] Lisa Anderson,et al. Demystifying the Arab Spring Parsing the Differences Between Tunisia , Egypt , and Libya , 2011 .
[16] Ljupco Kocarev,et al. Model for rumor spreading over networks. , 2010, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[17] J. Goldstone. Toward a Fourth Generation of Revolutionary Theory , 2001 .
[18] Wei Huang,et al. Rumor spreading model with consideration of forgetting mechanism: A case of online blogging LiveJournal , 2011 .
[19] Justin P. Chase,et al. America's changing attitudes toward homosexuality, civil unions, and same-gender marriage: 1977-2004. , 2007, Social work.
[20] N. Rashevsky,et al. Arms And Insecurity: A Mathematical Study Of The Causes And Origins Of War , 1962 .
[21] Cullen S. Hendrix,et al. Measuring state capacity: Theoretical and empirical implications for the study of civil conflict , 2010 .
[22] Sahar Khamis,et al. Cyberactivism in the Egyptian Revolution: How Civic Engagement and Citizen Journalism Tilted the Balance , 2011 .
[23] P. Collier,et al. Greed and Grievance in Civil War , 1999 .
[24] Christian Becker,et al. An epidemic model for information diffusion in MANETs , 2002, MSWiM '02.
[25] Albrecht Hofheinz,et al. The Internet in the Arab World: Playground for Political Liberalization , 2005 .
[26] Rowland R Kao,et al. The effect of contact heterogeneity and multiple routes of transmission on final epidemic size. , 2006, Mathematical biosciences.
[27] L. Meyers. Contact network epidemiology: Bond percolation applied to infectious disease prediction and control , 2006 .
[28] P. Driessche,et al. Effective degree network disease models , 2011, Journal of mathematical biology.
[29] C T Bauch,et al. A versatile ODE approximation to a network model for the spread of sexually transmitted diseases , 2002, Journal of mathematical biology.
[30] O. Wolkenhauer. Why model? , 2013, Front. Physiol..
[31] B. Wellman,et al. EGYPT: THE FIRST INTERNET REVOLT? , 2015 .
[32] Alex Burns,et al. Twitter free Iran: An evaluation of Twitter's role in public diplomacy and information operations in Iran's 2009 election crisis , 2009 .
[33] Alexander Gutfraind,et al. When do armed revolts succeed: lessons from Lanchester theory , 2012, J. Oper. Res. Soc..
[34] Alessandro Vespignani,et al. Epidemic dynamics in finite size scale-free networks. , 2002, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.
[35] T. Kuran,et al. Now out of Never: The Element of Surprise in the East European Revolution of 1989 , 1991, World Politics.
[36] Clay Shirky. The Political Power of Social Media , 2010 .
[37] Yamir Moreno,et al. Theory of Rumour Spreading in Complex Social Networks , 2007, ArXiv.
[38] Danah Boyd,et al. Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship , 2007, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..
[39] Moshe Kress,et al. Modeling Armed Conflicts , 2012, Science.
[40] Atef Said,et al. The Paradox of Transition to “Democracy” under Military Rule , 2014 .
[41] Michael J. North,et al. Tutorial on agent-based modelling and simulation , 2005, Proceedings of the Winter Simulation Conference, 2005..
[42] Ekaterina Stepanova,et al. The Role of Information Communication Technologies in the 'Arab Spring': Implications Beyond the Region , 2012 .
[43] J. Alterman. The Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted , 2011 .
[44] P. Howard,et al. Opening Closed Regimes: What Was the Role of Social Media During the Arab Spring? , 2011 .
[45] M. Macy,et al. The Emperor’s Dilemma: A Computational Model of Self‐Enforcing Norms1 , 2005, American Journal of Sociology.
[46] CeCelia Danna Collier. Cremation as an emerging cultural system , 2007 .
[47] Thilo Gross,et al. Cyclic dominance in adaptive networks , 2011 .