"Social Trust, Anarchy, and International Conflict" challenges
the democratic peace and diversionary war theories by emphasizing
the importance of social trust, its origin as a by-product of
effective governance exercised by strong states, and influence on
international conflict. The author argues that strong states
socialize individuals into social environments where self-esteem is
gained not through comparisons against out-groups, but rather
cooperative role fulfillment with other individuals. This
socialization, which contributes to the formation of generalized
social trust (itself a basic and powerful heuristic) is then
carried over into the state's interactions with international
actors, contributing to their pacific behavior and even influencing
the nature of international anarchy itself. As a result, democratic
peace is not really peace between democracies but rather peace
between strong, well-governed states, and diversionary war
represents not an effort to improve regime popularity but rather
state legitimacy.
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