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Foreign policy makers and international relations scholars have
become increasingly interested in the relationship between
democracy and war. In this book, the author argues that the
international relations of democratic states are best understood in
the context of the interaction of democratic and international
politics. Elections are an essential institution of democratic
states, while war is a defining element of international politics.
This book examines the interaction of these two elemental
phenomena. All state leaders must deal simultaneously with internal
and external pressures. The conjunction of domestic electoral
pressures and international pressures for war presents an acute
form of this dilemma. Those who support increasing democratic
influence on foreign policy have argued that this influence would
make states more peaceful, while others have asserted that it would
make foreign policy more volatile. The author shows that democratic
publics have been vulnerable to excessive enthusiasm for war, but
that this enthusiasm is tempered in an electoral environment by the
ability of politically legitimate antiwar leaders to increase the
domestic costs of going to war. Democratic leaders may have an
electoral incentive to seek out international conflict, but they
also have a strong motivation not to allow such conflicts to
escalate to war when elections are imminent. The author also argues
that the transparency of electoral politics in a democracy can lead
to changes in the behavior of other states. Electoral institutions
serve as an effective commitment mechanism for democratic states,
and other states want to avoid contributing to the favorable
electoral prospects of hawkish candidates. The author supports his
argument with both structured case studies and analysis of the
aggregate experience of all the democratic states over the past two
centuries. He shows that despite variation in public attitudes
toward international conflict, democratic states have engaged in
significantly fewer wars in the period leading up to elections than
in other parts of their electoral cycles.
Quantifying the Qualitative presents a systematic approach to
comparative case analysis based on insights from information
theory. This new method, which requires minimal quantitative
skills, helps students, policymakers, professionals, and scholars
learn more from comparative cases. The approach avoids the
limitations of traditional statistics in the small-n context and
allows analysts to systematically assess and compare the impact of
a set of factors on case outcomes with easy-to-use analytics.
Rigorous tools reduce bias, improve the knowledge gained from case
studies, and provide straightforward metrics for effectively
communicating results to a range of readers and leaders.
The Survivor's Guide to R provides a gentle, but thorough,
introduction to R. It is an ideal supplement to any introductory
statistics text or a practical field guide for those who want to
use the powerful R language for statistical analysis in their own
research. The book focuses on providing students with the
real-world R skills that are often hard to get to in statistics
classes: basic data management and manipulation, and working with R
graphics. The book is designed to get students with little or no
background in statistics or programming started on R within the
context of a statistics class, and to ensure that they have
acquired functional R skills that they can continue to use as they
move on to their own projects. The book begins with a
straightforward approach to understanding R objects, and then moves
systematically through the use of R to transform, sort, and
aggregate data; to work with complex textual and date/time data;
and to effectively build on R's default graphics capabilities to
produce highly customized and effective graphics. It focuses on
working with real-world data, with - on reading data in different
formats and the challenges of missing data. This book is intended
for those with little to no statistics or programming
experience---students and other new users who are likely to find
their first encounter with R more than a little intimidating. It is
written in an accessible and sympathetic style that makes minimal
assumptions about user skills, and provides frequent warnings about
common pitfalls that must be avoided along the road to R mastery.
Foreign policy makers and international relations scholars have
become increasingly interested in the relationship between
democracy and war. In this book, the author argues that the
international relations of democratic states are best understood in
the context of the interaction of democratic and international
politics. Elections are an essential institution of democratic
states, while war is a defining element of international politics.
This book examines the interaction of these two elemental
phenomena. All state leaders must deal simultaneously with internal
and external pressures. The conjunction of domestic electoral
pressures and international pressures for war presents an acute
form of this dilemma. Those who support increasing democratic
influence on foreign policy have argued that this influence would
make states more peaceful, while others have asserted that it would
make foreign policy more volatile.
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