Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in wars with autocratic states. This study offers an explanation of this syndrome of powerful pacifism drawn from the microeconomic theory of the state. State rent seeking creates an imperialist bias in a county's foreign policy. This bias is smallest in democracies, where the cost to society of controlling the state are relatively low, and greatest in autocracies, where the costs are higher. As a result of this bias, autocracies will be more expansionist and, in turn, war-prone. In their relations with each other, where the absence of this imperialist bias is manifest, the relative pacifism of democracies appears. In addition, democracies, ...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Cost-benefit analysis is applied to the choice of whether to go to war. The polar cases of autocraci...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
Does the restraint that prevents pairs of democracies from fighting large-scale wars also prevent th...
Otherwise powerful, formidable democracies are tempting targets for international violence because t...
What explains the level of violence during civil wars? In this paper, we argue that the size of the...
A democratic leader, anticipating a ‘‘rally ‘round the flag effect,’’ may have an incentive to diver...
What explains the level of violence during civil wars? In this paper, we argue that the size of the ...
Governments can finance the higher military spending associated with interstate war through a combin...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
The argument that democratization can bring about war is a powerful critique suggesting limits to th...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Cost-benefit analysis is applied to the choice of whether to go to war. The polar cases of autocraci...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
Does the restraint that prevents pairs of democracies from fighting large-scale wars also prevent th...
Otherwise powerful, formidable democracies are tempting targets for international violence because t...
What explains the level of violence during civil wars? In this paper, we argue that the size of the...
A democratic leader, anticipating a ‘‘rally ‘round the flag effect,’’ may have an incentive to diver...
What explains the level of violence during civil wars? In this paper, we argue that the size of the ...
Governments can finance the higher military spending associated with interstate war through a combin...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
Democratization reduces the risk of war, but uneven transitions toward democracy can increase the pr...
The argument that democratization can bring about war is a powerful critique suggesting limits to th...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Cost-benefit analysis is applied to the choice of whether to go to war. The polar cases of autocraci...
Abstract: Recent scholarship suggests that democracies tend to fight shorter conflicts that can be e...