It’s long been known that public support for foreign military intervention wanes with time. But are there major differences in men and women’s attitudes towards initiating and sustaining foreign wars? Ben Clements shows the persistence of a ‘gender gap’ in British public opinion by looking at the popular mood on British military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya
This paper investigates the fatality sensitivity of public opinion in coalition countries, i.e. thos...
The article reports significant group differences in early support for military action in the Persia...
Gender is now recognized as an important dividing line in American political life, and scholars have...
Recent scholarship indicates that gender correlates strongly with Americans' attitudes toward the us...
Research Highlights and Abstract This article shows: Clear pluralities of British survey responde...
This article shows: Clear pluralities of British survey respondents opposed their nation's military ...
Abstract The gender gap in support for war represents the largest and most consistent policy gender ...
For several decades public opinion researchers have identified differences in women's and men's att...
From the aftermath of Suez to the Kosovo campaign, Britain lost most of its colonies and ended up ta...
This article explores the gender gap in attitudes toward the use of military force in the United Sta...
Significant differences exist in Americans’ support for force between the 1991 Persian Gulf War and ...
This research explores the gender gap amongst female and male voters and its correlation with the De...
There is ample evidence from the US context that women, although hardly pacifist, are less supportiv...
While women’s political inclusion is central to international conflict resolution efforts, public at...
"Increasing numbers of U.S. women in elite positions lead us to ask if women and men share the same ...
This paper investigates the fatality sensitivity of public opinion in coalition countries, i.e. thos...
The article reports significant group differences in early support for military action in the Persia...
Gender is now recognized as an important dividing line in American political life, and scholars have...
Recent scholarship indicates that gender correlates strongly with Americans' attitudes toward the us...
Research Highlights and Abstract This article shows: Clear pluralities of British survey responde...
This article shows: Clear pluralities of British survey respondents opposed their nation's military ...
Abstract The gender gap in support for war represents the largest and most consistent policy gender ...
For several decades public opinion researchers have identified differences in women's and men's att...
From the aftermath of Suez to the Kosovo campaign, Britain lost most of its colonies and ended up ta...
This article explores the gender gap in attitudes toward the use of military force in the United Sta...
Significant differences exist in Americans’ support for force between the 1991 Persian Gulf War and ...
This research explores the gender gap amongst female and male voters and its correlation with the De...
There is ample evidence from the US context that women, although hardly pacifist, are less supportiv...
While women’s political inclusion is central to international conflict resolution efforts, public at...
"Increasing numbers of U.S. women in elite positions lead us to ask if women and men share the same ...
This paper investigates the fatality sensitivity of public opinion in coalition countries, i.e. thos...
The article reports significant group differences in early support for military action in the Persia...
Gender is now recognized as an important dividing line in American political life, and scholars have...