ABSTRACT

We generally separate “terrorism” topics from conventional criminal acts, acts of war, and victims of conventional crime or warfare, although the concepts overlap. Acts of war gure more prominently when addressing victims and victim care, although victims of terrorist acts oen receive dierent (or combined) kinds of injuries, react dierently in some ways, and should sometimes be treated dierently, than most victims of war (Peleg et al. 2010; Miller 2011).