The central purpose of this paper is to establish the relationship between power projection, technology and economic power. How economically powerful does a state need to be before it can afford the capital intensive technologies, foreign bases and military and logistical forces associated with global power projection? The specific research question we focus on in this paper is what determines how far states send their military forces? We argue that as the costs associated with projecting power decrease or as the wealth necessary to project power increases states will project power more frequently and at greater distances. We use a system level time series analysis from 1869-1936 and a dispute level test on all MIDs from 1870-2000 to test ...
Popular theories of technological-political interaction suggest a positive linear relationship betwe...
Correlations between Hofstede\u27s dimensions of power distance and uncertainty avoidance and select...
This paper attempts to answer the question of why major powers engage in more active foreign policy ...
The central purpose of this article is to establish the relation-ship between power projection, tech...
Why do only some powerful states project military power globally? To answer this question, we test t...
Why do some economically powerful states build and project military force while others do not? This ...
The relationship between physical distance and military power is oft-discussed and even more often a...
Many scholars argue that leaders' expectations about future shifts in the distribution of power can ...
We investigate how technology has influenced the size of armies. During the nineteenth century, the ...
The paper investigates how states manage multiple rivalries when faced with immediate threats. We ar...
Countries have better abilities and stronger incentives to engage in militarized conflicts the large...
The average size of states within the international system steadily expanded during the 19th century...
Proceeding from assumptions about interests and costs, two basic questions about the relation of for...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
I formalize and test the ratchet effect, a theory that variation in the offense-defense balance and ...
Popular theories of technological-political interaction suggest a positive linear relationship betwe...
Correlations between Hofstede\u27s dimensions of power distance and uncertainty avoidance and select...
This paper attempts to answer the question of why major powers engage in more active foreign policy ...
The central purpose of this article is to establish the relation-ship between power projection, tech...
Why do only some powerful states project military power globally? To answer this question, we test t...
Why do some economically powerful states build and project military force while others do not? This ...
The relationship between physical distance and military power is oft-discussed and even more often a...
Many scholars argue that leaders' expectations about future shifts in the distribution of power can ...
We investigate how technology has influenced the size of armies. During the nineteenth century, the ...
The paper investigates how states manage multiple rivalries when faced with immediate threats. We ar...
Countries have better abilities and stronger incentives to engage in militarized conflicts the large...
The average size of states within the international system steadily expanded during the 19th century...
Proceeding from assumptions about interests and costs, two basic questions about the relation of for...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
I formalize and test the ratchet effect, a theory that variation in the offense-defense balance and ...
Popular theories of technological-political interaction suggest a positive linear relationship betwe...
Correlations between Hofstede\u27s dimensions of power distance and uncertainty avoidance and select...
This paper attempts to answer the question of why major powers engage in more active foreign policy ...