A Quality of Government Peace? Bringing the State Back Into the Study of Inter-State Armed Conflict
Abstract
Domestically, democracy or democratization has not proved as successful in bringing
about preferred economic and social consequences as has “good governance” and
quality of government. Within the field of international relations, by contrast, one of
the strongest empirical regularities still remains that democracies do not wage war
against each other. In this paper we show however that the impact of quality of
government, most notably corruption, on the risk of interstate conflict by large
amounts trumps the influence of democracy. These results draw on dyadic Militarized
Interstate Disputes data in 1984-2000, and hold even under control for the capitalist
peace, incomplete democratization, realist claims and geographic constraints. We
argue that the causal mechanism underlying this finding is that quality of government
reduces information asymmetry among potentially warring parties, improves their
ability to communicate resolve, and to credibly commit to keeping to their promises.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350164_2010_20_raby_teorell.pdf
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Date
2010-09Author
Råby, Nils
Teorell, Jan
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2010:20
Language
eng