Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we focus on the heterogeneity of established parliamentary democracies and investigate the effects of their domestic constraints on international conflict behavior. We emphasize leaders' vulnerability to removal from office and how this vulnerability varies across democracies as a function of two aspects of a ruling parliamentary coalition: 1) its political position, that is, whether a government is "right" or "left"; and 2) its structural complexity. We present a model of the relationship between levels of conflict and leaders' vulnerability to removal from office. The model concludes that leaders who are more likely to be removed from office, sh...
This investigation was financially supported by the University of Kansas General Research Fund.Why d...
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Past studies examining the international conflict behavior of parliamentary democracies have reporte...
Consideration of the effects of domestic politics on international conflict behavior often consists ...
This paper addresses two issues which have emerged from the democratic peace literature: the consequ...
How do domestic political institutions affect the propensity to initiate international conflict? We ...
Although the empirical pattern of democratic peace is well-established, debate continues over its th...
This article studies the effect of parliamentary involvement on security policy. Building on Democra...
Abstract: This paper examines the transnational dimensions of low-level conflict an...
What are the domestic determinants of international conflict? A number of political scientists have ...
How do domestic political institutions affect the way states interact in international crises? In th...
<p>A number of puzzles exist regarding the role of domestic politics in the likelihood of internatio...
This investigation was financially supported by the University of Kansas General Research Fund.Why d...
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Past studies examining the international conflict behavior of parliamentary democracies have reporte...
Consideration of the effects of domestic politics on international conflict behavior often consists ...
This paper addresses two issues which have emerged from the democratic peace literature: the consequ...
How do domestic political institutions affect the propensity to initiate international conflict? We ...
Although the empirical pattern of democratic peace is well-established, debate continues over its th...
This article studies the effect of parliamentary involvement on security policy. Building on Democra...
Abstract: This paper examines the transnational dimensions of low-level conflict an...
What are the domestic determinants of international conflict? A number of political scientists have ...
How do domestic political institutions affect the way states interact in international crises? In th...
<p>A number of puzzles exist regarding the role of domestic politics in the likelihood of internatio...
This investigation was financially supported by the University of Kansas General Research Fund.Why d...
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
One of the few stylized facts in international relations is that democracies, unlike autocracies, al...