NASTY OR NICE - POLITICAL-SYSTEMS, ENDOGENOUS NORMS, AND THE TREATMENT OF ADVERSARIES

Citation
Bb. Demesquita et Rm. Siverson, NASTY OR NICE - POLITICAL-SYSTEMS, ENDOGENOUS NORMS, AND THE TREATMENT OF ADVERSARIES, The Journal of conflict resolution, 41(1), 1997, pp. 175-199
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Social, Sciences, Interdisciplinary","Political Science","International Relations
ISSN journal
00220027
Volume
41
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
175 - 199
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0027(1997)41:1<175:NON-PE>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
A large amount of recent research points to the importance of domestic political institutions in shaping foreign policy, most of it turning on the distinction between democratic and nondemocratic regimes. Howev er, fundamental characteristics differentiate regime types beyond the distinction between democratic and nondemocratic. Drawing a distinctio n between institutional differences that result from variation in the sizes of selectorates and winning coalitions, the authors consider the effect that regime type has on the prospects that a foreign leader wi ll be removed from office following a military defeat, be it in a war or some lesser level of violence. The authors show that the distinctio n, now common in the literature, between democratic and nondemocratic regimes is not adequate for understanding the linkages between domesti c and foreign affairs. A model is presented from which nine hypotheses are derived. A preliminary test of one hypothesis is presented, the r esults of which are consistent with the expectation that regimes, and consequently their leaders, will be the issue of conflict when power d ifferences are great and the winning state has either a large winning coalition or a small selectorate.