This investigation was financially supported by the University of Kansas General Research Fund.Why do multiparty cabinets in parliamentary democracies produce more extreme foreign policies than single-party cabinets? Our paper argues that particular institutional and psychological dynamics explain this difference. We test this argument using a global events data set incorporating foreign policy behaviors of numerous multiparty and single-party governments. We find that more parties and weak parliaments promote extremity in coalitions, but parliamentary strength has the opposite effect for single-party governments. This study challenges existing expectations about the impact of democratic institutions on foreign policy.PostprintPeer reviewe
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
Research linking democratization, institutional strength, and war prescribes the construction of str...
This article explores processes of coalition governance in foreign policy. Specifically, it argues t...
Why do multiparty cabinets in parliamentary democracies produce more extreme foreign policies than s...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Institutional constraints have been offered by some scholars as an explanation for why multiparty co...
Past studies examining the international conflict behavior of parliamentary democracies have reporte...
A central debate in the Comparative Foreign Policy literature concerns the role of government compos...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
Abstract. This study theorises the political system after the introduction of democracy through one ...
There is striking variation across parliamentary democracies in the power of prime ministers to empl...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Executive autonomy influences the ability of states to make credible commitments, utilise their dome...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
Research linking democratization, institutional strength, and war prescribes the construction of str...
This article explores processes of coalition governance in foreign policy. Specifically, it argues t...
Why do multiparty cabinets in parliamentary democracies produce more extreme foreign policies than s...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Institutional constraints have been offered by some scholars as an explanation for why multiparty co...
Past studies examining the international conflict behavior of parliamentary democracies have reporte...
A central debate in the Comparative Foreign Policy literature concerns the role of government compos...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Parliaments differ enormously in their foreign policy competences. This is best documented in the ar...
Abstract. This study theorises the political system after the introduction of democracy through one ...
There is striking variation across parliamentary democracies in the power of prime ministers to empl...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Executive autonomy influences the ability of states to make credible commitments, utilise their dome...
Much of the work on the democratic peace treats democracies as a homogenous set. In this paper we fo...
Research linking democratization, institutional strength, and war prescribes the construction of str...
This article explores processes of coalition governance in foreign policy. Specifically, it argues t...