National Security Professor's Analysis Featured in Forbes
Vesna Markovic, assistant professor of criminal justice and national security and
assistant dean of the University of New Haven's Henry C. Lee College at the University
of New Haven, is an expert on terrorism and female suicide bombers.
As part of an op-ed published recently in Forbes magazine, she examined an attack earlier this year in which a woman carrying a baby, and with
two children, detonated a bomb in a crowded market in the town of Madagali, Nigeria,
killing six people and injuring 17.
She wrote that the use of babies in suicide bombings is not a common global tactic,
but Boko Haram, anIslamic extremistgroup based in northeasternNigeria, has attempted this tactic on several occasions.
Suicide attacks will persist if the underlying factors that have allowed suicide bombers
and Boko Haram to exist are not addressed
"In Nigeria, there is a great discrepancy in social, economic, and almost every other
indicator between the north and south. "As long as desperate conditions persist, so
will Boko Haram.
"It is critical that the Food and Agriculture Organization's demands are met in order
to not only address the immediate humanitarian crisis, but also to bolster security
and to eventually eradicate Boko Haram's presence in the region," she concluded.
A former private investigator, Markovic uses her real-world experience and her research
to enrich her classes.
"Having a strong academic background in national security is important," she says.
"Getting this education from people who have worked in the field is invaluable."