How do domestic political conditions shape when leaders get punished for backing down in international crises? We explore how three factors—the president’s partisanship, the reaction of other elites, and whether the president justifies his decision on the basis of new information—influence the size of domestic audience costs. While standard theories in American politics suggest that partisanship should exert a large effect over voter behavior, we offer an alternative theory explaining why the president’s unique informational advantage following a crisis will mute partisanship’s effect on audience costs. We argue that the president’s justification for why he backed down, however, will have a large effect on audience costs. Using a series of ...
I argue that presidents use unilateral powers for particularistic aims to gain electoral support. Sp...
I argue that the national political environment can meaningfully affect variation in aggregate deman...
Abstract: When should threats and promises in international relations be viewed as credible? Recent ...
Audience costs theory posits that domestic publics punish leaders for making an external threat and ...
Does President Trump face domestic costs for foreign policy inconsistency? Will co- partisans and op...
According to a growing tradition in International Relations, one way governments can credibly signal...
Audience costs theory posits that domestic publics punish leaders for making an external threat and ...
Domestic audience costs can help leaders establish credible commitments by tying their hands. Most s...
Numerous prominent theories have relied on the concept of "audience costs" as a central causal mecha...
We estimate audience costs and examine their substantive effects on the evolution of interstate disp...
Do presidents incorporate the preferences of the public into their foreign policy decisions? Previou...
Does the state of the domestic economy change the size of the effect of audience costs? As public op...
Domestic audience costs can help leaders establish credible commit-ments by tying their hands. Most ...
Scholarship on democratic responsiveness focuses on whether political outcomes reflect public opinio...
<p>In a democratic society, does the electorate approve of truth and disapprove of deception, do opi...
I argue that presidents use unilateral powers for particularistic aims to gain electoral support. Sp...
I argue that the national political environment can meaningfully affect variation in aggregate deman...
Abstract: When should threats and promises in international relations be viewed as credible? Recent ...
Audience costs theory posits that domestic publics punish leaders for making an external threat and ...
Does President Trump face domestic costs for foreign policy inconsistency? Will co- partisans and op...
According to a growing tradition in International Relations, one way governments can credibly signal...
Audience costs theory posits that domestic publics punish leaders for making an external threat and ...
Domestic audience costs can help leaders establish credible commitments by tying their hands. Most s...
Numerous prominent theories have relied on the concept of "audience costs" as a central causal mecha...
We estimate audience costs and examine their substantive effects on the evolution of interstate disp...
Do presidents incorporate the preferences of the public into their foreign policy decisions? Previou...
Does the state of the domestic economy change the size of the effect of audience costs? As public op...
Domestic audience costs can help leaders establish credible commit-ments by tying their hands. Most ...
Scholarship on democratic responsiveness focuses on whether political outcomes reflect public opinio...
<p>In a democratic society, does the electorate approve of truth and disapprove of deception, do opi...
I argue that presidents use unilateral powers for particularistic aims to gain electoral support. Sp...
I argue that the national political environment can meaningfully affect variation in aggregate deman...
Abstract: When should threats and promises in international relations be viewed as credible? Recent ...