Recent studies on political ideology suggest the existence of partisan divides on matters of foreign and security policy, challenging the notion that “politics stops at the water's edge.” However, when taken as a whole, extant work provides decidedly mixed evidence of party-political differences outside domestic politics. This article first conducts a systematic empirical analysis of the relationship between parties’ left–right positions and their general attitude toward peace and security missions, which suggests that right-leaning parties tend to be more supportive of military operations. Yet, the results also show that the empirical pattern is curvilinear: centrist and center–right parties witness the highest level of support for militar...
This article examines the impact of parliamentary involvement in troop deployment decisions on restr...
A growing wave of scholarship suggests that ideology has demonstrable effects on various forms of ar...
The heterogeneity of foreign policy preferences has hampered a more effective Common Foreign and Sec...
Recent studies on political ideology suggest the existence of partisan divides on matters of foreign...
This paper contributes to current debates on the politicization of international politics by examini...
The move from territorial defence to ‘wars of choice’ has influenced the domestic politics of milita...
Although populist radical right (PRR) parties have been studied intensively for the last few decades...
The positions of political parties in various foreign policy questions and how such ideological stan...
The Common Security and Defense Policy of the European Union has recently come to the forefront as a...
Existing literature has examined party positions on military interventions across various countries,...
Do governments of the left attract more terrorism than governments of the right? We ex-amine how the...
Formal theorists in political science have unified under a single theoretical umbrella the behaviour...
This article examines the impact of parliamentary involvement in troop deployment decisions on restr...
This dissertation begins from a desire to explain situations in which left-wing parties appear to ad...
This article investigates the ways in which parties stake out left–right positions that deviate from...
This article examines the impact of parliamentary involvement in troop deployment decisions on restr...
A growing wave of scholarship suggests that ideology has demonstrable effects on various forms of ar...
The heterogeneity of foreign policy preferences has hampered a more effective Common Foreign and Sec...
Recent studies on political ideology suggest the existence of partisan divides on matters of foreign...
This paper contributes to current debates on the politicization of international politics by examini...
The move from territorial defence to ‘wars of choice’ has influenced the domestic politics of milita...
Although populist radical right (PRR) parties have been studied intensively for the last few decades...
The positions of political parties in various foreign policy questions and how such ideological stan...
The Common Security and Defense Policy of the European Union has recently come to the forefront as a...
Existing literature has examined party positions on military interventions across various countries,...
Do governments of the left attract more terrorism than governments of the right? We ex-amine how the...
Formal theorists in political science have unified under a single theoretical umbrella the behaviour...
This article examines the impact of parliamentary involvement in troop deployment decisions on restr...
This dissertation begins from a desire to explain situations in which left-wing parties appear to ad...
This article investigates the ways in which parties stake out left–right positions that deviate from...
This article examines the impact of parliamentary involvement in troop deployment decisions on restr...
A growing wave of scholarship suggests that ideology has demonstrable effects on various forms of ar...
The heterogeneity of foreign policy preferences has hampered a more effective Common Foreign and Sec...