Blainey (1988) argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about their relative power. Fey and Ramsay (2007) claim that this widely used “mutual optimism” explanation is theoretically incoherent. Their criticism neglects the need to specify a behavioral causal mechanism that links beliefs to the outbreak of war. We show how the rationalist game-theoretic work on the causes of war provides such mechanisms: the risk-return trade-off and costly signaling, and demonstrate that these models are immune to Fey and Ramsay’s critiques. We also show that the class of models Fey and Ramsay propose make the substantively unwarranted assumption that an actor can unilaterally impose peace on an opponent who strictly prefers...
According to a leading rationalist explanation, war can break out when a large, rapid shift of power...
Mark Fey and Kristopher Ramsay (2006) take issue with the presentation of how players ’ beliefs dive...
<p>Critiquing dyads as the unit of analysis in statistical work has become increasingly prominent; a...
Blainey (1988) argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about thei...
Blainey (1988) argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about thei...
argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about their relative powe...
Blainey (1988) popularized the argument that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations d...
W hy do states fight costly wars when less costly negotiated settlements are possible? Must there no...
One of the most widely accepted explanations for why wars occur despite ist Pareto-suboptimality is ...
We propose an elementary theory of wars fought by fully rational contenders. Two parties play a Mar...
The main theoretical task facing students of war is not to add to the already long list of arguments...
We propose an elementary theory of wars fought by fully rational contenders that features three of t...
According to a leading rationalist explanation, war can break out when a large, rapid shift of power...
© The Author(s) 2011. This article is published with open access at SpringerLink.com Abstract We pro...
For the bargaining model of war, in the absence of incomplete information and commitment problems, w...
According to a leading rationalist explanation, war can break out when a large, rapid shift of power...
Mark Fey and Kristopher Ramsay (2006) take issue with the presentation of how players ’ beliefs dive...
<p>Critiquing dyads as the unit of analysis in statistical work has become increasingly prominent; a...
Blainey (1988) argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about thei...
Blainey (1988) argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about thei...
argued that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations disagree about their relative powe...
Blainey (1988) popularized the argument that crises are more likely to end in war when two nations d...
W hy do states fight costly wars when less costly negotiated settlements are possible? Must there no...
One of the most widely accepted explanations for why wars occur despite ist Pareto-suboptimality is ...
We propose an elementary theory of wars fought by fully rational contenders. Two parties play a Mar...
The main theoretical task facing students of war is not to add to the already long list of arguments...
We propose an elementary theory of wars fought by fully rational contenders that features three of t...
According to a leading rationalist explanation, war can break out when a large, rapid shift of power...
© The Author(s) 2011. This article is published with open access at SpringerLink.com Abstract We pro...
For the bargaining model of war, in the absence of incomplete information and commitment problems, w...
According to a leading rationalist explanation, war can break out when a large, rapid shift of power...
Mark Fey and Kristopher Ramsay (2006) take issue with the presentation of how players ’ beliefs dive...
<p>Critiquing dyads as the unit of analysis in statistical work has become increasingly prominent; a...