Berinsky Abstract: Many political scientists and policymakers argue that unmediated events – the successes and failures on the battlefield – determine whether the mass public will support military excursions. The public supports war, the story goes, if the benefits of action outweigh the costs of conflict. Other scholars contend that the balance of elite discourse influences public support for war. I draw upon survey evidence from World War II and the current war in Iraq to come to a common conclusion regarding public support for international interventions. I find little evidence that citizens make complex cost/benefit calculations when evaluating military action. Instead, I find that patterns of elite conflict shape opinion concerning war...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
I seek to explain why democracies often maintain involvement in peripheral wars years after public s...
The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/mershon11/101011.mp4From the ...
In recent history, political analysts have frequently referred to the American public as war weary, ...
Prominent perspectives in the study of conflict point to two factors that exert substantial influenc...
This research examines the American public’s support of U.S. involvement in war. In particular, I ex...
What determines a democratic public’s willingness to tolerate the human and material costs of sustai...
Reifler’s theory of the determinants of public support for war has received a great deal of attentio...
How does the way states finance wars affect public support for conflict? Most existing research has ...
The public’s inability to gain direct personal experience or information about American military ope...
How do citizens’ normative beliefs affect international conflict? The last decade has shown a new fo...
This paper presents a theoretical model of interaction between a government and ordinary people over...
Public opinion is one of the most important aspects of a democracy as it is a great indicator of dem...
What is the role of political behavior in shaping the dynamics of conflict? World Politics models of...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
I seek to explain why democracies often maintain involvement in peripheral wars years after public s...
The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/mershon11/101011.mp4From the ...
In recent history, political analysts have frequently referred to the American public as war weary, ...
Prominent perspectives in the study of conflict point to two factors that exert substantial influenc...
This research examines the American public’s support of U.S. involvement in war. In particular, I ex...
What determines a democratic public’s willingness to tolerate the human and material costs of sustai...
Reifler’s theory of the determinants of public support for war has received a great deal of attentio...
How does the way states finance wars affect public support for conflict? Most existing research has ...
The public’s inability to gain direct personal experience or information about American military ope...
How do citizens’ normative beliefs affect international conflict? The last decade has shown a new fo...
This paper presents a theoretical model of interaction between a government and ordinary people over...
Public opinion is one of the most important aspects of a democracy as it is a great indicator of dem...
What is the role of political behavior in shaping the dynamics of conflict? World Politics models of...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
Using experiments, we show that subjects who are asked about their support for war without being tol...
I seek to explain why democracies often maintain involvement in peripheral wars years after public s...