Abstract Ordinary citizens sometimes favor making foreign actors “pay ” for their crimes at punishment levels that exceed the dictates of national security. In an online survey of adult U.S. citizens, individual differences in the general approval of retributive justice predict support for military responses to international crimes, but only when the casual-ties are mentioned. Retributivists also are more supportive of torturing captured terrorists. These relationships control for partisanship, ideol-ogy, humanitarianism, and hawkish foreign-policy beliefs, and occur only among citizens with low and medium levels of political sophistica-tion. Sophistication increased citizens ’ reliance on instrumental hawk/ dove beliefs, and—in the case of...
What drives individuals to condone state torture? This article advances our understanding through a ...
The importance of a reliable justice system and the rule of law is universally accepted. Nonetheless...
Do governments respond to terrorism with torture? Although states face incentives to increase tortu...
Abstract Ordinary citizens sometimes favor making foreign actors “pay ” for their crimes at punishme...
programmed and administered the survey, and to both of them along with Miroslav Nincic and Jennifer ...
Abstract Retributiveness and humanitarianism, predispositions that shape indi-viduals ' moral j...
A large body of work points to diverging civil–military views on the initial decision to use force, ...
A large body of work points to diverging civil-military views on the initial decision to use force, ...
What explains the differences in the ways captor states choose to treat enemy prisoners during war? ...
The United States’ effort to win the war on terrorism by spreading democracy served to legitimize to...
There is a substantial moralistic streak in U.S. elite attitudes about war against states perceived ...
The events of September 11 have clearly changed the way that Americans think about politics and poli...
What are the implications of international law for attitudes toward wartime violence? Existing resea...
Domestic approaches to compliance with international commitments often presume that international la...
This research examines the thesis that religiosity has conflicting influences on Americans ’ attitud...
What drives individuals to condone state torture? This article advances our understanding through a ...
The importance of a reliable justice system and the rule of law is universally accepted. Nonetheless...
Do governments respond to terrorism with torture? Although states face incentives to increase tortu...
Abstract Ordinary citizens sometimes favor making foreign actors “pay ” for their crimes at punishme...
programmed and administered the survey, and to both of them along with Miroslav Nincic and Jennifer ...
Abstract Retributiveness and humanitarianism, predispositions that shape indi-viduals ' moral j...
A large body of work points to diverging civil–military views on the initial decision to use force, ...
A large body of work points to diverging civil-military views on the initial decision to use force, ...
What explains the differences in the ways captor states choose to treat enemy prisoners during war? ...
The United States’ effort to win the war on terrorism by spreading democracy served to legitimize to...
There is a substantial moralistic streak in U.S. elite attitudes about war against states perceived ...
The events of September 11 have clearly changed the way that Americans think about politics and poli...
What are the implications of international law for attitudes toward wartime violence? Existing resea...
Domestic approaches to compliance with international commitments often presume that international la...
This research examines the thesis that religiosity has conflicting influences on Americans ’ attitud...
What drives individuals to condone state torture? This article advances our understanding through a ...
The importance of a reliable justice system and the rule of law is universally accepted. Nonetheless...
Do governments respond to terrorism with torture? Although states face incentives to increase tortu...