According to traditional, hawkish reputation theory, states inevitably harm their reputation for resolve by backing down and enhance or maintain it by choosing to stand firm and engage in military conflict. This logic has been used, at least in part, to justify consequential interventions like the Vietnam War, which resulted in tens of thousands of deaths and hundreds of billions of dollars spent. However, is it always true that states maximize their reputation for resolve by refusing to back down? In other words, is fighting to demonstrate resolve always a logical reason to go to war? I advance a new theory of reputation—dovish reputation theory—that argues the answer is no. My theory can be summarized in two steps. In the first step, choo...
This paper considers a simple model of zero-sum conflict between two players ( e.g., territorial di...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
<p>This dissertation examines whether war has reputational consequences by analyzing the conditions ...
Leaders throughout history have been concerned--often obsessed--with how other leaders perceive them...
When do states defend their reputations? States sometimes pay heavy costs to protect their reputatio...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2004.Includes bibl...
Building on Schelling's (1960; 1966) work concerning reputation and deterrence in international conf...
How does the state's behavior in negotiations with one non-state group influence the behavior of oth...
How does the state's behavior in negotiations with one non-state group influence the behavior of oth...
Both sides in the Korean War calculated their adversarys military power and diplomatic resolve by st...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
This paper considers a simple model of zero-sum conflict between two players ( e.g., territorial di...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
<p>This dissertation examines whether war has reputational consequences by analyzing the conditions ...
Leaders throughout history have been concerned--often obsessed--with how other leaders perceive them...
When do states defend their reputations? States sometimes pay heavy costs to protect their reputatio...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2004.Includes bibl...
Building on Schelling's (1960; 1966) work concerning reputation and deterrence in international conf...
How does the state's behavior in negotiations with one non-state group influence the behavior of oth...
How does the state's behavior in negotiations with one non-state group influence the behavior of oth...
Both sides in the Korean War calculated their adversarys military power and diplomatic resolve by st...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
Throughout history, victory in conflict has created fearsome reputations. With it, the victor ensure...
This paper considers a simple model of zero-sum conflict between two players ( e.g., territorial di...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, a...