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Who Are These Belligerent Democratizers? Reassessing the Impact of Democratization on War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2009

Vipin Narang
Affiliation:
Department of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, E-mail: vnarang@fas.harvard.edu
Rebecca M. Nelson
Affiliation:
Department of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, E-mail: rmnelson@fas.harvard.edu
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Abstract

In a key finding in the democratic peace literature, Mansfield and Snyder argue that states with weak institutions undergoing incomplete transitions to democracy are more likely to initiate an external war than other types of states. We show that the empirical data do not support this claim. We find a dearth of observations where incomplete democratizers with weak institutions participated in war. Additionally, we find that the statistical relationship between incomplete democratization and war is entirely dependent on the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire prior to World War I. We also find that the case selection in Mansfield and Snyder rarely involved incomplete democratizers with weak institutions. We therefore conclude that the finding that incomplete democratizers with weak institutions are more likely to initiate or participate in war is not supported by the empirical data.

Type
Research Note
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 2009

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