Terrorist Attacks & Presidential Approval Rating

Authors

  • Elizabeth Bennett New York University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.22.4

Keywords:

9/11, terrorism, presidentialism

Abstract

After the attacks of September 11th the U.S. focused much of its foreign policy efforts on the War on Terror and prevention of another attack on U.S. soil. This paper will look at terrorist attacks dating back to 1970 in order to fully understand the impact of terrorist attacks on U.S. presidential approval ratings and the existence of the ‘rally around the flag’ effect during different administrations. Location, lethality, style, and political affiliation of the president will be variables focused on in a pre and post 9/11 context. This paper will give special consideration to 9/11, excluding the attacks in many cases, in order to view if there is a significant stable impact on approval ratings from terrorist attacks over time.

Author Biography

Elizabeth Bennett, New York University

Elizabeth Bennett, 22, Albany NY, is a graduate student at New York University pursuing an M.A. in International Relations/International Security. In 2013 she received her Bachelor of Science degree in Managerial Economics from Bentley University. Her interests include security studies, terrorism, and South Asia/Middle East affairs.

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Published

2014-04-15

How to Cite

Bennett, Elizabeth. 2014. “Terrorist Attacks & Presidential Approval Rating”. Politikon: The IAPSS Journal of Political Science 22 (April). Online:27-44. https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.22.4.

Issue

Section

Research articles