Arms races are costly and inefficient; therefore, standard causal explanations, based on threat perception, are inadequate, as states should prefer to resolve disagreements prior to the onset of these inefficient competitions. Building on recent research, arms races are alternatively conceptualized as a product of uncertainty, used to reveal information. Expectations are derived regarding when arms races should be most likely, allowing for one of the first systematic, quantitative tests of the causes of arms races. Empirical tests support theoretical expectations that arms races are most likely in contexts where there are salient competitive stakes and high levels of uncertainty, such as territorial rivalries or the early tenure of new lead...
I extend the implications of a rationalist model of war initiation to explore the effects of uncerta...
In canonical accounts of war, conflict outcomes are inherently uncertain. Contesting literatures pos...
We study countries choosing armament levels and then whether or not to go to war. We show that if th...
Recent developments in arms races and their theoretical analysis are treated, including the changing...
This study investigates the impact that arms races have on the probability of major power rivals goi...
The relationship between arms races and war is a critical consideration in both peace research and s...
The relationship between arms races and war is a critical consideration in both peace research and s...
There is now a large empirical literature on estimating arms races. This paper surveys some of the e...
This volume provides the first comprehensive history of the arms racing phenomenon in modern interna...
Earlier studies of the relationship between arms race and the escalation of conflict into war have s...
The purpose of this paper is to suggest and justify a simple approach to arms competitions, wherein ...
The authors investigate the relationship between system structure and the initiation of militarized ...
This article is an attempt to combine two ways of modeling arms races. There is no doubt that the cl...
Scholars have long recognized that imminent shifts in relative power may motivate declining states t...
The authors investigate the relationship between system structure and the initiation of militarized ...
I extend the implications of a rationalist model of war initiation to explore the effects of uncerta...
In canonical accounts of war, conflict outcomes are inherently uncertain. Contesting literatures pos...
We study countries choosing armament levels and then whether or not to go to war. We show that if th...
Recent developments in arms races and their theoretical analysis are treated, including the changing...
This study investigates the impact that arms races have on the probability of major power rivals goi...
The relationship between arms races and war is a critical consideration in both peace research and s...
The relationship between arms races and war is a critical consideration in both peace research and s...
There is now a large empirical literature on estimating arms races. This paper surveys some of the e...
This volume provides the first comprehensive history of the arms racing phenomenon in modern interna...
Earlier studies of the relationship between arms race and the escalation of conflict into war have s...
The purpose of this paper is to suggest and justify a simple approach to arms competitions, wherein ...
The authors investigate the relationship between system structure and the initiation of militarized ...
This article is an attempt to combine two ways of modeling arms races. There is no doubt that the cl...
Scholars have long recognized that imminent shifts in relative power may motivate declining states t...
The authors investigate the relationship between system structure and the initiation of militarized ...
I extend the implications of a rationalist model of war initiation to explore the effects of uncerta...
In canonical accounts of war, conflict outcomes are inherently uncertain. Contesting literatures pos...
We study countries choosing armament levels and then whether or not to go to war. We show that if th...