209 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Historically, territorial dispute has been the single most contentious issue over which states fight. This project investigates the related questions of whether and under what circumstances an alteration of international borders---that is a territorial change that takes the form of a state-to-state territorial transfer, partition of a single country, or unification of two or more countries---can prevent future violence, and in that sense manage the underlying territorial dispute. A model linking territorial changes and future militarized conflicts between the participant countries is developed. The model posits that the decision to use force to alter the outcome of the p...
Research on the democratic peace starts with a fact: democracies almost never fight wars with one an...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
209 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Historically, territorial dis...
Abstract: This study attempts to expand the more than four-decade-old literature on geography and ar...
Abstract: While geographic proximity is widely regarded as making armed conflict more likely, I argu...
Abstract. Contentious issues have frequently been overlooked in the study of international relations...
Why do some territorial disputes defy settlement? Through what mechanism might these resistant terri...
Since World War II, less than a third of all interstate wars have ended in peace treaties. Instead o...
This paper presents a simple model to characterize the outcome of a land dispute between two rival p...
Territorial disputes are one of the most dangerous sources of friction between states. As we are onl...
Why do interstate rivalries end? In pursuit of this question, we advance a territorial theory of riv...
This paper seeks to answer the question: Under what geographic, demographic, and military condition...
This dissertation contributes to an improved understanding of the causes and consequences of border ...
Contemporary military conflicts are not likely to occur between states but rather within states. Rec...
Research on the democratic peace starts with a fact: democracies almost never fight wars with one an...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
209 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Historically, territorial dis...
Abstract: This study attempts to expand the more than four-decade-old literature on geography and ar...
Abstract: While geographic proximity is widely regarded as making armed conflict more likely, I argu...
Abstract. Contentious issues have frequently been overlooked in the study of international relations...
Why do some territorial disputes defy settlement? Through what mechanism might these resistant terri...
Since World War II, less than a third of all interstate wars have ended in peace treaties. Instead o...
This paper presents a simple model to characterize the outcome of a land dispute between two rival p...
Territorial disputes are one of the most dangerous sources of friction between states. As we are onl...
Why do interstate rivalries end? In pursuit of this question, we advance a territorial theory of riv...
This paper seeks to answer the question: Under what geographic, demographic, and military condition...
This dissertation contributes to an improved understanding of the causes and consequences of border ...
Contemporary military conflicts are not likely to occur between states but rather within states. Rec...
Research on the democratic peace starts with a fact: democracies almost never fight wars with one an...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...