When multiple third-parties (states, coalitions, and international organizations) intervene in the same conflict, do their efforts inform one another? Anecdotal evidence suggests such a possibility, but research to date has not attempted to model this interdependence directly. The current project breaks with that tradition. In particular, it proposes three competing explanations of how previous intervention efforts affect current intervention decisions: a cost model (and a variant on it, a limited commitments model), a learning model, and a random model. After using a series of Markov transition (regime-switching) models to evaluate conflict management behavior within militarized interstate disputes in the 1946-2001 period, this study con...
This dissertation examines how interventions by external states can influence the degree of violence...
Engagement in a costly and destructive war can be understood as the punishment for entering into a d...
Third parties are thought to face a trade-off in that those actions most likely to bring peace in t...
When multiple third-parties (states, coalitions, and international organizations) intervene in the s...
Why do some militarized interstate disputes involve multiple third party attempts to resolve the dis...
Why do some international conflicts diffuse and expand beyond its initiators? This dissertation answ...
Efforts to resolve interstate disputes are often characterized by repeated engagement and evolving s...
In this dissertation, I seek to explain mediation initiation in militarized interstate disputes. In ...
This research addresses the question of why some crises between states are resolved through negotiat...
This project investigates states' strategies in the management of contentious interstate disputes as...
The dissertation explores the phenomenon of joining behavior--non-neutral interventions by third par...
This dissertation focuses on the effects of a third-party mediator in protracted conflict settings. ...
Engagement in a costly and destructive war can be understood as the punishment for entering into a d...
Militarized conflict is one of the most devastating of all human activities. The international comm...
Why do some militarized interstate disputes involve multiple third party attempts to resolve the dis...
This dissertation examines how interventions by external states can influence the degree of violence...
Engagement in a costly and destructive war can be understood as the punishment for entering into a d...
Third parties are thought to face a trade-off in that those actions most likely to bring peace in t...
When multiple third-parties (states, coalitions, and international organizations) intervene in the s...
Why do some militarized interstate disputes involve multiple third party attempts to resolve the dis...
Why do some international conflicts diffuse and expand beyond its initiators? This dissertation answ...
Efforts to resolve interstate disputes are often characterized by repeated engagement and evolving s...
In this dissertation, I seek to explain mediation initiation in militarized interstate disputes. In ...
This research addresses the question of why some crises between states are resolved through negotiat...
This project investigates states' strategies in the management of contentious interstate disputes as...
The dissertation explores the phenomenon of joining behavior--non-neutral interventions by third par...
This dissertation focuses on the effects of a third-party mediator in protracted conflict settings. ...
Engagement in a costly and destructive war can be understood as the punishment for entering into a d...
Militarized conflict is one of the most devastating of all human activities. The international comm...
Why do some militarized interstate disputes involve multiple third party attempts to resolve the dis...
This dissertation examines how interventions by external states can influence the degree of violence...
Engagement in a costly and destructive war can be understood as the punishment for entering into a d...
Third parties are thought to face a trade-off in that those actions most likely to bring peace in t...