The Politics of Risking Peace: Do Hawks or Doves Deliver the Olive Branch?
This article explores the politics of risking international cooperation with a distrusted adversary. It develops a model in which two states attempt to learn over the course of two periods whether or not mutual cooperation is possible given their (initially unknown) preferences. In one of the states...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International organization 2005-01, Vol.59 (1), p.1-38 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This article explores the politics of risking international
cooperation with a distrusted adversary. It develops a model in which
two states attempt to learn over the course of two periods whether or
not mutual cooperation is possible given their (initially unknown)
preferences. In one of the states, the government is engaged in
domestic political competition with an opposition party. One party is
known to have more hawkish preferences than the other, on average, and
voters must decide which party to elect after observing the
international interaction in the first period. The model shows that,
when trust is low but continued conflict is costly, cooperation is most
likely to be initiated by a moderate hawk—a leader with moderate
preferences from the more hawkish party. Moreover, while dovish leaders
are better at eliciting cooperation in the short run, mutual
cooperation is most likely to endure if it was initiated by a hawk.
Some empirical implications and illustrations of the model are
discussed.I gratefully acknowledge
thoughtful comments received from Andrew Kydd, James Morrow, Brett
Ashley Leeds, T. Clifton Morgan, Kenneth Scheve, Deborah Larson,
Bruce Russett, Alex Mintz, and the anonymous reviewers. An earlier
version of this article was presented at the 43rd annual meeting of
the International Studies Association, March 2002. |
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ISSN: | 0020-8183 1531-5088 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0020818305050071 |