Do democracies and autocracies intervene militarily in different types of civil conflict? In contrast to the existing literature that makes no distinction between military interventions undertaken by democracies and those by autocracies, I argue that democracies and autocracies are likely to intervene in different types of civil conflict. Specifically, I find that an increase in the rebel capabilities and the existence of an ethnic tie between the rebel group and the third-party state will increase the probability of a military intervention favoring the rebel group only when a third-party state is democratic. The evidence also shows that an autocracy is more likely to intervene when there are lootable natural resources such as secondary dia...
External state intervention is a complex phenomenon which crosses the disciplinary line between econ...
This paper presents a simple model to characterize explicitly the role that an intervening third par...
Recent years have seen a surge of literature examining how political institutions influence the risk...
Do democracies and autocracies intervene militarily in different types of civil conflict? In contras...
Do democracies and autocracies intervene militarily in different types of civil conflict? In contras...
Recent events have raised questions about the extent to which military intervention promotes democra...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently as au-tocra...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Abstract: Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently a...
This research note examines how domestic institutions can moderate the relationship between domestic...
This study is motivated by two questions: To what extent are countries engaged in military intervent...
When and how do minor power states decide to intervene in external conflicts? When minor power stat...
Especially more difficult conflicts tend to attract international mediation, while democracies are m...
External unilateral intervention in civil wars has been always a subject of interest in internationa...
External state intervention is a complex phenomenon which crosses the disciplinary line between econ...
This paper presents a simple model to characterize explicitly the role that an intervening third par...
Recent years have seen a surge of literature examining how political institutions influence the risk...
Do democracies and autocracies intervene militarily in different types of civil conflict? In contras...
Do democracies and autocracies intervene militarily in different types of civil conflict? In contras...
Recent events have raised questions about the extent to which military intervention promotes democra...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently as au-tocra...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Abstract: Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently a...
This research note examines how domestic institutions can moderate the relationship between domestic...
This study is motivated by two questions: To what extent are countries engaged in military intervent...
When and how do minor power states decide to intervene in external conflicts? When minor power stat...
Especially more difficult conflicts tend to attract international mediation, while democracies are m...
External unilateral intervention in civil wars has been always a subject of interest in internationa...
External state intervention is a complex phenomenon which crosses the disciplinary line between econ...
This paper presents a simple model to characterize explicitly the role that an intervening third par...
Recent years have seen a surge of literature examining how political institutions influence the risk...