Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be easily won. This is most likely due to the accountability incentives that constrain democratic leaders. Fearing removal from office, democratic leaders will try to choose short conflicts against weaker opponents. The authors question this argument by presenting an alternative explanation for the connection between democracy and shorter disputes and victories. Building on prior works that have identified a territorial peace, this article argues that democracies often have few territorial issues over which to contend. In fact, rarely do democracies have territorial disputes with their neighbors. Thus, democracies have less difficult issues to re...
This book re-evaluates the foundations of the democratic peace literature and presents three distinc...
UnrestrictedAcademic scholars and politicians have promoted democracy as a strategy for sustaining p...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be easily won....
Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be easily won....
Multiple studies have confirmed that democracies are more likely than other regime types to resolve ...
Research confirms that interdemocratic conflicts are more likely to be resolved peacefully. However,...
Do democratic dyads handle their disputes more peacefully than non-democratic dyads, or have they cl...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Democratic leaders are more prone to domestic sanction following defeats, and these audience costs a...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
The argument that democracies are less belligerent toward one another because of their experience wi...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
This book re-evaluates the foundations of the democratic peace literature and presents three distinc...
UnrestrictedAcademic scholars and politicians have promoted democracy as a strategy for sustaining p...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be easily won....
Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be easily won....
Multiple studies have confirmed that democracies are more likely than other regime types to resolve ...
Research confirms that interdemocratic conflicts are more likely to be resolved peacefully. However,...
Do democratic dyads handle their disputes more peacefully than non-democratic dyads, or have they cl...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Democratic leaders are more prone to domestic sanction following defeats, and these audience costs a...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
The argument that democracies are less belligerent toward one another because of their experience wi...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
Democracies rarely engage in conflicts with one another, though they are not averse to fighting auto...
This book re-evaluates the foundations of the democratic peace literature and presents three distinc...
UnrestrictedAcademic scholars and politicians have promoted democracy as a strategy for sustaining p...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...