196 research outputs found

    Public Opinion and Soviet Foreign Policy: Competing Belief Systems in the Policy-Making Process

    Get PDF
    Swings of American public opinion with respect to the Soviet Union and its actions are often attributed to the individual interested American\u27s lack of enduring convictions

    Regime Type and Bilateral Treaty Formalization

    Get PDF
    How does domestic regime type affect bilateral cooperation, and one of its most visible manifestations, bilateral treaties? This article explains how domestic political regime affects bilateral cooperation and, contrary to the expectations of some scholars, why autocracies should be expected to be more likely than democracies to enter into bilateral treaties. If the preferences of a pair of states are not identical, the sets of agreements that each party would consent to (win-sets) need to overlap for a bilateral treaty to be acceptable. Because additional domestic constraints reduce the size of a country’s win-set, autocracies should have broader win-sets than democracies. Therefore, autocratic dyads should be more likely to formalize bilateral treaties than other pairs of states. Based on an original data set, I present empirical evidence showing that pairs of autocracies are more likely than other pairs of states to enter into agreements formalizing bilateral cooperation

    Presidents, Legislators, and Foreign Policy in Latin America

    Full text link

    Modelos de relaciones internacionales y polĂ­tica exterior

    No full text
    • …
    corecore