This article investigates the effect of regime type on the number of civilian fatalities that states inflicted in interstate wars between 1900 and 2003. As opposed to several previous studies, the author finds little support for normative arguments positing that democracies kill fewer civilians in war. In fact, the author finds that democracies are significantly more likely than nondemocracies to kill more than fifty thousand non-combatants. Democracies also kill more civilians when they are involved in wars of attrition and kill about as many (and perhaps more) noncombatants than autocracies in such wars. These findings provide qualified support for institutional arguments about democratic accountability. Other implications of the institut...
This research examined the support for international military interventions as a function of the pol...
Does military intervention affect civilian death tolls? Existing research has focused on internation...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Military leaders, policymakers, and academics have long debated the relative merits of volunteer ver...
BACKGROUND: Warring groups that compete to dominate a civilian population confront contending behavi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88090/1/j.1468-2478.2011.00679.x.pd
Warring groups that compete to dominate a civilian population confront contending behavioral options...
Do the international laws of war effectively protect civilian populations from deliberate attack? In...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
The study of violence against civilians with its over 200 million dead in the 20th century is unders...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
This article analyses non-state actor violence against civilians during intrastate wars. The main pu...
The argument that democratization can bring about war is a powerful critique suggesting limits to th...
Cost-benefit analysis is applied to the choice of whether to go to war. The polar cases of autocraci...
This research examined the support for international military interventions as a function of the pol...
Does military intervention affect civilian death tolls? Existing research has focused on internation...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...
Military leaders, policymakers, and academics have long debated the relative merits of volunteer ver...
BACKGROUND: Warring groups that compete to dominate a civilian population confront contending behavi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88090/1/j.1468-2478.2011.00679.x.pd
Warring groups that compete to dominate a civilian population confront contending behavioral options...
Do the international laws of war effectively protect civilian populations from deliberate attack? In...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
The study of violence against civilians with its over 200 million dead in the 20th century is unders...
The authors estimate a dynamic model to assess the effects of democracy on war outcomes and how thes...
This article analyses non-state actor violence against civilians during intrastate wars. The main pu...
The argument that democratization can bring about war is a powerful critique suggesting limits to th...
Cost-benefit analysis is applied to the choice of whether to go to war. The polar cases of autocraci...
This research examined the support for international military interventions as a function of the pol...
Does military intervention affect civilian death tolls? Existing research has focused on internation...
This dissertation examines the relationship between domestic political structures and the propensity...