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201 to 210 of 242 Results
Feb 26, 2016
Sumit Ganguly; Timothy Hellwig; William R. Thompson, 2016, "Replication Data for: The Foreign Policy Attitudes of Indian Elites: Variance, Structure, and Common Denominators", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BYZDYE, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:qsj5zEe/+TpPPv52AORMMQ== [fileUNF]
Foreign policy beliefs systems have received much attention. Yet nearly all work examines attitudes in western democracies, chiefly the United States. The current security environment, however, requires we ask whether the foreign policy views of individuals in other nations—particularly regional powers such as the BRICs—are similar in structure to...
Feb 26, 2016
Tim Haesebrouck, 2016, "Replication Data for: Democratic Participation in the Air Strikes against Islamic State A Qualitative Comparative Analysis", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/11SAJZ, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Although over sixty partners have joined the US-led coalition gainst the Islamic State (IS), only a handful of states was willing to carry out air strikes against IS-targets. This article aims to explain the pattern of democratic participation in the air campaign. It builds on the rich literature on military burden sharing and democratic peace theo...
Feb 26, 2016
Daniel Hill, 2016, "Replication Data for: Why Governments Cede Sovereignty: Evidence from Regional Human Rights Courts", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/6M4LFJ, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:3Pn53mqXygq9DRQCM2J9Lg== [fileUNF]
This study examines a government's decision to cede authority over fundamental questions of policy to international organizations. Explanations for delegation to international institutions focus on the benefits of ``locking in'' domestic political institutions and signaling intentions to the public. This line of reasoning suggests that partly democ...
Feb 15, 2016
Jeff Carter; Glenn Palmer, 2016, "Replication Data for: How the Piper is Paid: Regime Type and the Financing of Interstate Wars", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/9O0YIO, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Governments can finance the higher military spending associated with interstate war through a combination of cutting non-military spending, imposing higher taxes, borrowing, and adopting an inflationary monetary policy. We argue that the incentives of survival-motivated leaders influence the strategies governments use to fund their war efforts and...
Feb 15, 2016
Victor Asal; Kathleen Deloughery; Steve Sin, 2016, "Replication Data for: Democracy, Inclusion and Failure in Counter-Insurgency", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/T27NQO, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:h/R1/dA2DPWH31KbotjzZQ== [fileUNF]
Why do the strong lose? Intuitively stronger violent actors should win wars against weaker actors. The literature on insurgencies suggests that democracies will do worse than other countries. However, there is little quantitative literature on why states succeed or fail in their efforts against insurgencies and the key works find democracy does not...
Feb 15, 2016
Spencer Willardson, 2016, "Replication Data for: Detention as a Peacemaking Strategy: The 2007-08 Iraq Surge and US Detention Policy", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/TX160A, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:SZGkiU/gikfvQQRGR8mAqA== [fileUNF]
The surge in Iraq was a key foreign policy decision of the past decade. Its success prompted a second surge into Afghanistan by a new president a few years later. The success of the Iraq surge has prompted work by academics and policymakers alike. One aspect of the success of the surge has been underplayed by both groups – the role played by the de...
Feb 15, 2016
Oindrila Roy, 2016, "Replication Data for: Religious Roots of War Attitudes in the United States: Insights from Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Persian Gulf", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/SYACXH, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:qzYpxRxoVglu8xmqvqM5AA== [fileUNF]
Several scholars have effectively explained why religious “belonging”, “behaving”, and “believing” can matter in determining war related attitudes. However, there seems to be a disagreement in the existing scholarship on whether religious factors exercise any direct influence on such attitudes that is independent of political predispositions. I wei...
Feb 15, 2016
Sabri Ciftci; Gunes Murat Tezcur, 2016, "Replication Data for: Soft Power, Religion and anti-Americanism in the Middle East", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ZXIDXZ, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:qID8S/DLuecCN9zs7SKUWQ== [fileUNF]
This study presents the first systematic analysis of the public opinion dimension of soft power competition in the contemporary Middle East. Starting from the dynamics of regional rivalry between Turkey, Iran, and Saudi Arabia, it proposes a series of hypotheses about sectarian identity, religious worldviews, and anti-Americanism as determinants of...
Feb 15, 2016
Elena McLean; Dwight Roblyer, 2016, "Replication Data for: Public Support for Economic Sanctions: An Experimental Analysis", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BSAARV, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:XIzfvntlB8oezR20SczjNQ== [fileUNF]
What are the determinants of public support for the government’s foreign policy? We shed light on this question by using experiments investigating public support for economic sanctions. Our results suggest that individuals are primarily motivated by humanitarian concerns in their decision to support the use of sanctions against a target country. We...
Feb 14, 2016
Tim Christian Wegenast; Georg Strüver, 2016, "Replication Data for: The Hard Power of Natural Resources: Oil and the Outbreak of Militarized Interstate Disputes", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/LJXGBB, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:oFM61y3SBklu0XwC0EW7Dg== [fileUNF]
According to conventional wisdom, strategic natural resources like oil are harmful to international peace. Nonetheless, there is little comparative work on the link between resource abundance and interstate conflicts. Analyzing the impact of oil on militarized interstate disputes on both a monadic and dyadic level of analysis for the period from 19...
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