Since the Vietnam War, U.S. policymakers have worried that the American public will support military operations only if the human costs of the war, as measured in combat casualties, are minimal. Although the public is rightly averse to suffering casualties, the level of popular sensitivity to U.S. military casualties depends critically on the context in which those losses occur. The public's tolerance for the human costs of war is primarily shaped by the intersection of two crucial factors: beliefs about the rightness or wrongness of the war, and beliefs about the war's likely success. The impact of each belief depends upon the other. Ultimately, however, beliefs about the likelihood of success matter most in determining the public's willin...
This research examines the American public’s support of U.S. involvement in war. In particular, I ex...
Recent scholarship argues that how members of Congress respond to an ongoing war significantly influ...
Reifler’s theory of the determinants of public support for war has received a great deal of attentio...
In this article, we argue that the public will tolerate significant numbers of U.S. combat casualtie...
War heightens public interest in politics, especially when human lives are lost. We examine whether...
Scholars have long conceptualized public support for war as the product of a cost– benefit calculati...
Did mounting troop casualties during the Iraq War tum the American public against the conflict? Ana...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
Public opinion is one of the most important aspects of a democracy as it is a great indicator of dem...
Many contend that President Bush's reelection and increased vote share in 2004 prove that the Iraq W...
In their article “Success Matters: Casualty Sensitivity and the War in Iraq,” Christopher Gelpi, Pet...
The ‘‘proximate casualties’ ’ hypothesis holds that popular support for American wars is undermined ...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
This paper investigates the fatality sensitivity of public opinion in coalition countries, i.e. thos...
Weappreciate Berinsky and Druckman’s thoughtful critique of our recent work regarding the public’s w...
This research examines the American public’s support of U.S. involvement in war. In particular, I ex...
Recent scholarship argues that how members of Congress respond to an ongoing war significantly influ...
Reifler’s theory of the determinants of public support for war has received a great deal of attentio...
In this article, we argue that the public will tolerate significant numbers of U.S. combat casualtie...
War heightens public interest in politics, especially when human lives are lost. We examine whether...
Scholars have long conceptualized public support for war as the product of a cost– benefit calculati...
Did mounting troop casualties during the Iraq War tum the American public against the conflict? Ana...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
Public opinion is one of the most important aspects of a democracy as it is a great indicator of dem...
Many contend that President Bush's reelection and increased vote share in 2004 prove that the Iraq W...
In their article “Success Matters: Casualty Sensitivity and the War in Iraq,” Christopher Gelpi, Pet...
The ‘‘proximate casualties’ ’ hypothesis holds that popular support for American wars is undermined ...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
This paper investigates the fatality sensitivity of public opinion in coalition countries, i.e. thos...
Weappreciate Berinsky and Druckman’s thoughtful critique of our recent work regarding the public’s w...
This research examines the American public’s support of U.S. involvement in war. In particular, I ex...
Recent scholarship argues that how members of Congress respond to an ongoing war significantly influ...
Reifler’s theory of the determinants of public support for war has received a great deal of attentio...