We investigate how nondemocratic regimes use the military and how this can lead to the emergence of military dictatorships. Nondemocratic regimes need the use of force in order to remain in power, but this creates a political moral hazard problem; a strong military may not simply work as an agent of the elite but may turn against them in order to create a regime more in line with their own objectives. The political moral hazard problem increases the cost of using repression in nondemocratic regimes and in particular, necessitates high wages and policy concessions to the military. When these concessions are not su¢ cient, the military can take action against a nondemocratic regime in order to create its own dictatorship. A more important con...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
It was concluded in the literature that military is merely a symptom of underlying political difficu...
We explore how institutional set-ups, in particular changes in political institutions through coups ...
We investigate how nondemocratic regimes use the military and how this can lead to the emergence of ...
We investigate how nondemocratic regimes use the military and how this can lead to the emergence of ...
In contrast to the conventional wisdom that democratization reduces coups, 46% of coups targeted dem...
This dissertation examines how the likelihood of military coups varies depending on a country’s adop...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
This article presents a systematic analysis of military coups following popular mass uprisings in no...
What makes certain dictatorships more likely than others to democratize? I argue that military dicta...
Abstract. This study provides theoretical conditions for a stable political system. This study has t...
Military rule as a form of autocratic governance can mean either rule by a military strongman uncons...
We develop a three-player (the poor, the rich and the military) model in which the military plays a ...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
We explore how institutional set-ups, in particular changes in political institutions through coups ...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
It was concluded in the literature that military is merely a symptom of underlying political difficu...
We explore how institutional set-ups, in particular changes in political institutions through coups ...
We investigate how nondemocratic regimes use the military and how this can lead to the emergence of ...
We investigate how nondemocratic regimes use the military and how this can lead to the emergence of ...
In contrast to the conventional wisdom that democratization reduces coups, 46% of coups targeted dem...
This dissertation examines how the likelihood of military coups varies depending on a country’s adop...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
This article presents a systematic analysis of military coups following popular mass uprisings in no...
What makes certain dictatorships more likely than others to democratize? I argue that military dicta...
Abstract. This study provides theoretical conditions for a stable political system. This study has t...
Military rule as a form of autocratic governance can mean either rule by a military strongman uncons...
We develop a three-player (the poor, the rich and the military) model in which the military plays a ...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
We explore how institutional set-ups, in particular changes in political institutions through coups ...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
It was concluded in the literature that military is merely a symptom of underlying political difficu...
We explore how institutional set-ups, in particular changes in political institutions through coups ...