The likelihood of conflict and the observation of joint democracy tend to cluster regionally. This article tests the argument that these clusters can be explained by regional variations in the stability of international borders using a new dataset of territorial dispute hot spots from 1960–1998. These hot spots identify spatial and temporal correlations in the territorial dispute data and therefore serve as close proxies for regional or neighbourhood instability. The addition of these hot spots also eliminates a common form of omitted variable bias – the spatial clustering of conflict – in international conflict models. These results confirm that joint democracy is only statistically significant as a predictor of fatal militarized interstat...
Abstract: While geographic proximity is widely regarded as making armed conflict more likely, I argu...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...
A consistent and robust finding in the democratic peace literature is that democracies tend to clust...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
Abstract: This study attempts to expand the more than four-decade-old literature on geography and ar...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
Can states usher in more peaceful relations with their neighbors by signing agreements that delineat...
Research on the democratic peace starts with a fact: democracies almost never fight wars with one an...
How does border settlement – that is, the management of salient territorial conflict – affect the pr...
Conflict appears more often between neighboring states. Adjacency generates interaction opportunitie...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
Over the history of modern international relations research, we have moved from systemic and regiona...
Do democratic dyads handle their disputes more peacefully than non-democratic dyads, or have they cl...
Abstract: While geographic proximity is widely regarded as making armed conflict more likely, I argu...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...
A consistent and robust finding in the democratic peace literature is that democracies tend to clust...
Research arguing that external threats determine regime type has generally failed to provide systema...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
Abstract: This study attempts to expand the more than four-decade-old literature on geography and ar...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
Can states usher in more peaceful relations with their neighbors by signing agreements that delineat...
Research on the democratic peace starts with a fact: democracies almost never fight wars with one an...
How does border settlement – that is, the management of salient territorial conflict – affect the pr...
Conflict appears more often between neighboring states. Adjacency generates interaction opportunitie...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
Over the history of modern international relations research, we have moved from systemic and regiona...
Do democratic dyads handle their disputes more peacefully than non-democratic dyads, or have they cl...
Abstract: While geographic proximity is widely regarded as making armed conflict more likely, I argu...
What distinguishes the militarized territorial disputes that escalate to war from those that do not?...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...