Peceny, Beer, and Sanchez-Terry (2002) find that interstate dyads containing a democracy and a personalist dictatorship are more likely than other types of dyads to experience militarized disputes. They argue that this is because democracies are especially likely to challenge personalist dictatorships. Unfortunately, they do not identify which state in a conflictual dyad initiated the dispute and so cannot present data to support their claim. We improve on their research design by using "directed dyads" to identify potential initiators. We confirm their finding that democracy-personalist dictatorship dyads are particularly conflict-prone, but we also disprove their argument that democracies attack dictators, as we find that personalist dict...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
Does military rule make a state more belligerent internationally? Several studies have recently esta...
Though empirical research has generally demonstrated that democracies experience more terrorism than...
What are the most important sources of institutional variation among authoritarian regimes, and how ...
Otherwise powerful, formidable democracies are tempting targets for international violence because t...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Although the statistical literature on conflict studies has generated strong and consistent findings...
Recent scholarship has emphasized variation in militarized interstate dispute (MIDs) propensity acro...
Does the restraint that prevents pairs of democracies from fighting large-scale wars also prevent th...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
The literature on the democratic peace has emerged from two empirical claims: (1) Democracies are un...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
Many statistical studies in international relations investigate the claim that democracies do not fi...
Democratization has been one of the main policy goals towards reducing internal conflicts in the las...
Democratization has been one of the main policy goals towards reducing internal conflicts in the las...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
Does military rule make a state more belligerent internationally? Several studies have recently esta...
Though empirical research has generally demonstrated that democracies experience more terrorism than...
What are the most important sources of institutional variation among authoritarian regimes, and how ...
Otherwise powerful, formidable democracies are tempting targets for international violence because t...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Although the statistical literature on conflict studies has generated strong and consistent findings...
Recent scholarship has emphasized variation in militarized interstate dispute (MIDs) propensity acro...
Does the restraint that prevents pairs of democracies from fighting large-scale wars also prevent th...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
The literature on the democratic peace has emerged from two empirical claims: (1) Democracies are un...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
Many statistical studies in international relations investigate the claim that democracies do not fi...
Democratization has been one of the main policy goals towards reducing internal conflicts in the las...
Democratization has been one of the main policy goals towards reducing internal conflicts in the las...
The effect of regime type on conflict onset is a well-studied phenomenon, and various studies have f...
Does military rule make a state more belligerent internationally? Several studies have recently esta...
Though empirical research has generally demonstrated that democracies experience more terrorism than...