I formalize and test the ratchet effect, a theory that variation in the offense-defense balance and the cost of war leads to increasing geographic size of units (e.g., states, empires, and superpowers) in the international system from the interaction of the offense-defense balance and the guns-and-butter tradeoff. When the cost of war is high, the status quo obtains. When the cost of war is low, change depends on three levels of the offense-defense balance: 1) when offense is dominant, units transfer few resources to subunits and expand through conquest; 2) when defense is dominant, units transfer substantial resources to subunits in order to consolidate internal cohesion and forestall secession; and 3) when neither offense nor defense is d...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
The argument extends the neo-realist rethinking of realism, with particular attention to the nature ...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
The average size of states within the international system steadily expanded during the 19th century...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
While the factors affecting the initiation of war have been extensively studied, the factors that de...
We examine the propensity of states to be involved in international conflict conditioned on three pr...
We revisit the old and well-established theory of free-riding in military alliances. Existing empiri...
This document offers a description of a new dataset created to test an institutionalist explanation ...
We investigate how technology has influenced the size of armies. During the nineteenth century, the ...
Understanding the conditions under which state leaders are willing to honor alliance commitments in ...
This paper develops a bargaining model that explains why political power-sharing agreements lead to ...
Scholars have long recognized that imminent shifts in relative power may motivate declining states t...
This paper uses a formal model to analyze the effects of military competition between states on the ...
Empirical study has worn essential theoretical edges from the power transition theory and rival bala...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
The argument extends the neo-realist rethinking of realism, with particular attention to the nature ...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
The average size of states within the international system steadily expanded during the 19th century...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
While the factors affecting the initiation of war have been extensively studied, the factors that de...
We examine the propensity of states to be involved in international conflict conditioned on three pr...
We revisit the old and well-established theory of free-riding in military alliances. Existing empiri...
This document offers a description of a new dataset created to test an institutionalist explanation ...
We investigate how technology has influenced the size of armies. During the nineteenth century, the ...
Understanding the conditions under which state leaders are willing to honor alliance commitments in ...
This paper develops a bargaining model that explains why political power-sharing agreements lead to ...
Scholars have long recognized that imminent shifts in relative power may motivate declining states t...
This paper uses a formal model to analyze the effects of military competition between states on the ...
Empirical study has worn essential theoretical edges from the power transition theory and rival bala...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
The argument extends the neo-realist rethinking of realism, with particular attention to the nature ...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...