This article studies the effect of parliamentary involvement on security policy. Building on Democratic Peace Theory, it examines whether democracies with a parliamentary veto power are indeed less likely to participate in military interventions, than democracies without such a veto power, ceteris paribus. By studying patterns of participation across 25 to 35 countries in five military missions, this paper finds modest evidence for such a parliamentary peace and suggests that it depends on the character of the military mission in question. If a mission is framed as a test case of alliance solidarity, as was the case with OEF and the Iraq War, domestic institutional constraints can be trumped by alliance politics. If, however, countries enjo...
While this volume’s Part IV is devoted to internal and external oppositions to ‘liberal peace’ in th...
The government’s defeat in the House of Commons on the issue of military intervention represents a c...
My hypothesis is that there is a general trend toward subordinating war powers to constitutional con...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
The article contributes to the growing debate on parliamentary war powers and shows how parliaments ...
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
This article argues that there is a need to question whether parliamentary involvement actually lead...
When do democracies participate in armed conflict and when do they abstain? Studies on the democrati...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Abstract: Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently a...
Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently as au-tocra...
This paper addresses two issues which have emerged from the democratic peace literature: the consequ...
While this volume’s Part IV is devoted to internal and external oppositions to ‘liberal peace’ in th...
The government’s defeat in the House of Commons on the issue of military intervention represents a c...
My hypothesis is that there is a general trend toward subordinating war powers to constitutional con...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
The article contributes to the growing debate on parliamentary war powers and shows how parliaments ...
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
This article argues that there is a need to question whether parliamentary involvement actually lead...
When do democracies participate in armed conflict and when do they abstain? Studies on the democrati...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Abstract: Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently a...
Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently as au-tocra...
This paper addresses two issues which have emerged from the democratic peace literature: the consequ...
While this volume’s Part IV is devoted to internal and external oppositions to ‘liberal peace’ in th...
The government’s defeat in the House of Commons on the issue of military intervention represents a c...
My hypothesis is that there is a general trend toward subordinating war powers to constitutional con...