Electing to Fight : Why Emerging Democracies Go to War

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-11-13
Publisher(s): Mit Pr
List Price: $32.95

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Summary

Winner of Georgetown University's Lepgold Book Prize fro 2005, Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2006 and Gold Award Winner for Political Science in the 2005 ForeWordMagazine Book of the Year Awards Does the spread of democracy really contribute to international peace? Successive U. S. administrations have justified various policies intended to promote democracy not only by arguing that democracy is intrinsically good but by pointing to a wide range of research concluding that democracies rarely, if ever, go to war with one another. To promote democracy, the United States has provided economic assistance, political support, and technical advice to emerging democracies in Eastern and Central Europe, and it has attempted to remove undemocratic regimes through political pressure, economic sanctions, and military force. In Electing to Fight, Edward Mansfield and Jack Snyder challenge the widely accepted basis of these policies by arguing that states in the early phases of transitions to democracy are more likely than other states to become involved in war. Drawing on both qualitative and quantitative analysis, Mansfield and Snyder show that emerging democracies with weak political institutions are especially likely to go to war. Leaders of these countries attempt to rally support by invoking external threats and resorting to belligerent, nationalist rhetoric. Mansfield and Snyder point to this pattern in cases ranging from revolutionary France to contemporary Russia. Because the risk of a state's being involved in violent conflict is high until democracy is fully consolidated, Mansfield and Snyder argue, the best way to promote democracy is to begin by building the institutions that democracy requires-such as the rule of law-and only then encouraging mass political participation and elections. Readers will find this argument particularly relevant to prevailing concerns about the transitional government in Iraq. Electing to Fightalso calls into question the wisdom of urging early elections elsewhere in the Islamic world and in China.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments ix
The Perilous Path to the Democratic Peace
1(20)
Reconciling the Democratic Peace with Accounts of Democratization and War
21(18)
Explaining Turbulent Transitions
39(30)
Data and Measures for Testing the Argument
69(26)
Democratization and War: Statistical Findings
95(44)
Democratizing Dyads and the Outbreak of War: Statistical Findings
139(30)
Democratizing Initiators of War: Tracing Causal Processes
169(60)
Tracing Trajectories of Democratization and War in the 1990s
229(36)
Conclusion: Sequencing the Transition for Peace
265(20)
Appendix Democratizing Countries that Experienced the Outbreak of External War, 1816--1992 285(4)
Index of Persons 289(4)
Index of Subjects 293(10)
About the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs 303

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