In international politics, states learn from the behavior of other nations, including the reputations states form through their actions in the international system. I develop a model of how states process this information and examine how this learning affects international conflict. The model builds off of cognitive balance theory and foreign policy learning models, and breaks new ground in its ability to provide a contextual assessment of reputation in world politics. I then investigate whether a dyad is more likely to experience conflict if at least one of the states has a reputation for hostility. This hypothesis is tested empirically across all dyads in the international system from 1817-2000. The results indicate that states do engage ...
The study of reputation is one of the foundational topics of modern international relations. However...
This dissertation project broadly addresses the question of how state behavior is conditioned by the...
We examine whether the conditions affecting initial expressions of hostility are similar to those af...
Building on Schelling's (1960; 1966) work concerning reputation and deterrence in international conf...
This study explores logical and empirical implications of friendship and enmity in world politics by...
State-level decisions to initiate militarized conflicts are the result of various factors, ranging f...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
What effect does repeated play have on reputation building? The international relations literature ...
What are the domestic determinants of international conflict? A number of political scientists have ...
The concept of international affinity—albeit under different names—captures a central place in inter...
The empirical finding that democracies do not fight each other has long suggested that regime type i...
Leaders consider the broader international landscape when making foreign policy choices. This landsc...
The proposition that domestic political vulnerability provides an incentive for leaders to engage in...
Motivations for conflict management are rarely discussed in terms of commitments that potential thir...
This paper attempts to answer the question of why major powers engage in more active foreign policy ...
The study of reputation is one of the foundational topics of modern international relations. However...
This dissertation project broadly addresses the question of how state behavior is conditioned by the...
We examine whether the conditions affecting initial expressions of hostility are similar to those af...
Building on Schelling's (1960; 1966) work concerning reputation and deterrence in international conf...
This study explores logical and empirical implications of friendship and enmity in world politics by...
State-level decisions to initiate militarized conflicts are the result of various factors, ranging f...
Militarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that...
What effect does repeated play have on reputation building? The international relations literature ...
What are the domestic determinants of international conflict? A number of political scientists have ...
The concept of international affinity—albeit under different names—captures a central place in inter...
The empirical finding that democracies do not fight each other has long suggested that regime type i...
Leaders consider the broader international landscape when making foreign policy choices. This landsc...
The proposition that domestic political vulnerability provides an incentive for leaders to engage in...
Motivations for conflict management are rarely discussed in terms of commitments that potential thir...
This paper attempts to answer the question of why major powers engage in more active foreign policy ...
The study of reputation is one of the foundational topics of modern international relations. However...
This dissertation project broadly addresses the question of how state behavior is conditioned by the...
We examine whether the conditions affecting initial expressions of hostility are similar to those af...