This paper examines whether there are systematic differences in military spending between different types of autocratic regimes. We view military expenditure as an instrument a dictator can exploit in order to stay in power. How he utilises this instrument depends on the institutional set-up of his regime. We distinguish between military regimes, single party states and personalist regimes, and predict that military regimes should have the highest, whereas personalist dictatorships should have the lowest level of military spending. Using panel data on 64 dictatorships from 1960 to 2000, we find empirical evidence that our hypotheses are not rejected
What are the most important sources of institutional variation among authoritarian regimes, and how ...
There is some consensus in the literature that economic sanctions targeting authoritarian regimes ar...
This study deals with the effects of authoritarian regimes on state capacity or the quality of gover...
This paper examines whether there are systematic differences in military spending between different ...
Why do some autocratic states allocate more resources to the military than others? We contend that a...
This paper examines empirically whether democracies allocate fewer resources to the military than di...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
This paper explores how international sanctions affect authoritarian rulers’ decisions concerning re...
Abstract. This paper explores how international sanctions affect authoritarian rulers’ decisions con...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
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...
What are the most important sources of institutional variation among authoritarian regimes, and how ...
There is some consensus in the literature that economic sanctions targeting authoritarian regimes ar...
This study deals with the effects of authoritarian regimes on state capacity or the quality of gover...
This paper examines whether there are systematic differences in military spending between different ...
Why do some autocratic states allocate more resources to the military than others? We contend that a...
This paper examines empirically whether democracies allocate fewer resources to the military than di...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
This paper explores how international sanctions affect authoritarian rulers’ decisions concerning re...
Abstract. This paper explores how international sanctions affect authoritarian rulers’ decisions con...
Unlike usual approaches to military expenditures that concentrate on foreign affairs, this paper ana...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
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...
What are the most important sources of institutional variation among authoritarian regimes, and how ...
There is some consensus in the literature that economic sanctions targeting authoritarian regimes ar...
This study deals with the effects of authoritarian regimes on state capacity or the quality of gover...