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Domestic uncertainty, third-party resolve, and international conflict

Author

Listed:
  • Matthew DiLorenzo

    (AidData, College of William & Mary)

  • Bryan Rooney

    (Carlos III-Juan March Institute of Social Science, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)

Abstract

Uncertainty about resolve is a well-established rationalist explanation for war. In addition to estimating the resolve of immediate rivals, leaders choose their actions in a crisis based on expectations about how third parties will respond. We argue that leaders will become more likely to develop inconsistent estimates of rivals’ relative capabilities and resolve – and thus will become more likely to fight – when domestic political changes occur in states that are allied with an opponent. We also consider how the relationship between conflict in rivalries and third-party domestic change depends on domestic political institutions in the third party. We argue that this effect should only hold when a challenger does not also share an alliance with the third party, and that the effect should be strongest when the third party is a non-democratic state. We test our theory using a dataset of changes in leaders’ domestic supporting coalitions and data on militarized interstate disputes from 1920 to 2001. Consistent with our hypotheses, we find that the likelihood of conflict increases in rivalries only when domestic coalition changes occur in states that share an alliance with only one member of a rivalry, and that this effect is strongest and most consistent for non-democratic third parties.

Suggested Citation

  • Matthew DiLorenzo & Bryan Rooney, 2018. "Domestic uncertainty, third-party resolve, and international conflict," Journal of Peace Research, Peace Research Institute Oslo, vol. 55(4), pages 445-459, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:joupea:v:55:y:2018:i:4:p:445-459
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