War, Democracy, and Internal Conflict: Israel in a Comparative Perspective

War's ramifications on political order are rarely discussed. Dissent, consent, and challenges to constitutional order in wartime are not simply reactions to the characteristics of international warfare. Several theoretical approaches try to explain the blurred boundaries between international a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative politics 1999-04, Vol.31 (3), p.317-336
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description War's ramifications on political order are rarely discussed. Dissent, consent, and challenges to constitutional order in wartime are not simply reactions to the characteristics of international warfare. Several theoretical approaches try to explain the blurred boundaries between international and internal politics. In Israel political institutions and the ruling elite played important roles in structuring cooperation and conflict, yet culture and historical processes significantly affected the state's power and political order. Endogenous forces such as values, fears, perceptions, and institutions and long-term processes of war fatigue, political polarization, modernization, liberalism, and religious fundamentalism shape dissent, consent, and their effect on democratic constitutional arrangements.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR
subjects Armed forces
Comparative Study
Conflict
Democracy
Dissent
Effects
Foreign policy
International relations
Israel
Liberalism
Phenomenology
Political conflict
Political parties
Political protests
Politics
Public policy
Theory
War
War conflict
World wars
title War, Democracy, and Internal Conflict: Israel in a Comparative Perspective
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