Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace

Structural theories of international peace among democratic regimes have relied on two distinct explanatory logics: democratic institutions may cause a state’s foreign policy to tend toward peace by exposing policymaking elites to pressure from ordinary citizens (the popular logic) or to pressure fr...

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Main Authors: JOSHI, Devin K., Maloy, J. S., Peterson, Timothy M.
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2015
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/1939
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soss_research-31962016-04-13T08:54:05Z Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace JOSHI, Devin K. Maloy, J. S. Peterson, Timothy M. Structural theories of international peace among democratic regimes have relied on two distinct explanatory logics: democratic institutions may cause a state’s foreign policy to tend toward peace by exposing policymaking elites to pressure from ordinary citizens (the popular logic) or to pressure from other governmental agencies (the elite logic). These logics are often conflated in scholarly studies of war and peace, but we attempt to isolate the popular logic for empirical testing by developing a novel measure of institutionalized popular influence, the Institutional Democracy Index (IDI). Whereas previous usage of the Polity index to operationalize democratic structures has succeeded in testing the elite logic more than the popular logic, we use the IDI to analyze long-established democracies’ involvement in international conflict between 1961 and 2001. What we find are significant differences within the family of democratic regimes that point to a monadic structural explanation of peace: more popular democracies are less warlike with respect to all other regimes, not just other democracies. By capturing variance among democratic regimes in their structures of inclusion (especially formal rules pertaining to voter access, electoral formulae, and cameral structures), the IDI enables us to observe crucial differences between the conflict propensities of more popular and more elite types of democracy. 2015-07-07T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/1939 info:doi/10.1177/0022343314567722 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University democratic institutions democratic peace militarized conflict Defense and Security Studies Political Science
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic democratic institutions
democratic peace
militarized conflict
Defense and Security Studies
Political Science
spellingShingle democratic institutions
democratic peace
militarized conflict
Defense and Security Studies
Political Science
JOSHI, Devin K.
Maloy, J. S.
Peterson, Timothy M.
Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
description Structural theories of international peace among democratic regimes have relied on two distinct explanatory logics: democratic institutions may cause a state’s foreign policy to tend toward peace by exposing policymaking elites to pressure from ordinary citizens (the popular logic) or to pressure from other governmental agencies (the elite logic). These logics are often conflated in scholarly studies of war and peace, but we attempt to isolate the popular logic for empirical testing by developing a novel measure of institutionalized popular influence, the Institutional Democracy Index (IDI). Whereas previous usage of the Polity index to operationalize democratic structures has succeeded in testing the elite logic more than the popular logic, we use the IDI to analyze long-established democracies’ involvement in international conflict between 1961 and 2001. What we find are significant differences within the family of democratic regimes that point to a monadic structural explanation of peace: more popular democracies are less warlike with respect to all other regimes, not just other democracies. By capturing variance among democratic regimes in their structures of inclusion (especially formal rules pertaining to voter access, electoral formulae, and cameral structures), the IDI enables us to observe crucial differences between the conflict propensities of more popular and more elite types of democracy.
format text
author JOSHI, Devin K.
Maloy, J. S.
Peterson, Timothy M.
author_facet JOSHI, Devin K.
Maloy, J. S.
Peterson, Timothy M.
author_sort JOSHI, Devin K.
title Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
title_short Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
title_full Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
title_fullStr Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
title_full_unstemmed Popular vs. Elite Democratic Structures and International Peace
title_sort popular vs. elite democratic structures and international peace
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2015
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/1939
_version_ 1770572920908677120