1 to 10 of 26 Results
Nov 27, 2007
Christopher Gelpi, 2007, "Replication data for: Democratic Diversions: Governmental Structure and the Externalization of Domestic Conflict", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/WDQQXW, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:ftr/JBzOl8VQ5RUEL+/jKQ== [fileUNF]
Students of international politics have often argued that state leaders initiate the use of force internationally to divert attention away from domestic problems. The author contends that these arguments concerning the relationship between domestic unrest and international conflict are not supported empirically because they focus too narrowly on th... |
Nov 27, 2007 -
Replication data for: Democratic Diversions: Governmental Structure and the Externalization of Domestic Conflict
MS Word - 20.0 KB -
MD5: fb98b5265fb4f175368e580261af01af
Detailed description of variables in data file |
Nov 27, 2007 -
Replication data for: Democratic Diversions: Governmental Structure and the Externalization of Domestic Conflict
Tabular Data - 7.6 KB - 15 Variables, 180 Observations - UNF:3:ftr/JBzOl8VQ5RUEL+/jKQ==
Data file for this study |
Nov 27, 2007 -
Replication data for: Democratic Diversions: Governmental Structure and the Externalization of Domestic Conflict
Unknown - 35.5 KB -
MD5: 3650f7e2efe063e0273200ff156820ce
Zip file containing data for this study in original formats |
Nov 27, 2007
Christopher Gelpi; Peter Feaver; and Jason Reifler, 2007, "Replication data for: Success Matters: Casualty Sensitivity and the War in Iraq", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/OHIOTF, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:fYjf/4VE41/INDUUItWP2Q== [fileUNF]
Since the Vietnam War, U.S. policymakers have worried that the American public will support military operations only if the human costs of the war, as measured in combat casualties, are minimal. Although the public is rightly averse to suffering casualties, the level of popular sensitivity to U.S. military casualties depends critically on the conte... |
Tabular Data - 176.8 KB - 11 Variables, 7463 Observations - UNF:3:AJ7tqSv3koKd4EPIcjJarA==
Data file for this study |
Tabular Data - 7.2 KB - 19 Variables, 97 Observations - UNF:3:TaHfyIPyCuOW6+q2S6Vuqg==
Data file for this study |
ZIP Archive - 60.5 KB -
MD5: 4a6a0c20e62e8d575a3477ef46e6594d
Zip file containing data for this study in original file format |
Tabular Data - 31.1 KB - 13 Variables, 1125 Observations - UNF:3:dGyVUh27C7KfMQt5IIzQXA==
Data file for this study |
Nov 27, 2007 - American Political Science Review Dataverse
Christopher Gelpi; Peter Feaver, 2007, "Replication data for: Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick? Veterans in the Policy Making Elite and the American Use of Force", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/RRNIDP, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:mFShltO+HtkRhGz0bIjnxA== [fileUNF]
Other research has shown (1) that civilians and the military differ in their views about when and how to use military force; (2) that the opinions of veterans track more closely with military officers than with civilians who never served in the military; and (3) that U.S. civil–military relations shaped Cold War policy debates. We assess whether th... |