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Making liberal use of Kant? Democratic peace theory and Perpetual Peace

International Relations, 2018
The work of Immanuel Kant has been foundational in modern democratic peace theory. His essay Toward Perpetual Peace gives three prescriptions for attaining peace between democracies: republican institutions, a pacific union between states, and an ethos ...
Sid Simpson
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Democratic Peace

2023
Abstract: This book advances the theory that “democratic peace” does not exclusively refer to an absence of war among democracies but should also be thought of as a particular way of “doing, thinking, and feeling” peace. Democratic peace is not only then a statistical finding or a rhetorical commonplace invoked to justify foreign policy decisions ...
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Democratizing for Peace

American Political Science Review, 1998
The argument that democratization can bring about war is a powerful critique suggesting limits to the linkage between democracy and peace. This research examines this claim. Our findings demonstrate that democratizing polities are substantially less war prone than previously argued.
Michael D. Ward, Kristian S. Gleditsch
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The peace education imperative: a democratic rationale for peace education as a civic duty

, 2020
This paper articulates a normative philosophical justification for Peace Education as a civic duty understood from within the imperatives of democratic political legitimacy.
Dale T. Snauwaert
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Grasping the Democratic Peace

, 1994
By illuminating the conflict-resolving mechanisms inherent in the relationships between democracies, Bruce Russett explains one of the most promising developments of the modern international system: the striking fact that the democracies that it ...
B. Russett
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From Democratic Peace to Democratic War?

Peace Review, 2007
The “democratic peace” is not only a fancy idea of academia, most prominently advanced by the philosopher of Enlightenment Immanuel Kant in his famous essay on “Perpetual Peace” (1795), but two hun...
Anna Geis, Lothar Brock, Harald Müller
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Debating the Democratic Peace

Foreign Affairs, 1996
Are democracies less likely to go to war than other kinds of states? This question is of tremendous importance in both academic and policy-making circles and one that has been debated by political scientists for years. The Clinton administration, in particular, has argued that the United States should endeavor to promote democracy around the world ...
Francis Fukuyama, Michael E. Brown
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The Democratic Peace

2017
The phenomenon of democratic peace more clearly extended beyond merely the rich industrialized countries belonging to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). A simple dichotomy between democracy and autocracy, of course, hides real shades of difference, and mixed systems share features of both.
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Market Prosperity, Democratic Consolidation, and Democratic Peace

Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2000
A model is introduced that yields a single parsimonious explanation for a diverse range of political phenomena, including the processes of democratic consolidation and peace among democratic nations. The model predicts democratic values to arise from the norms of contract that are endemic in developed market economies and yields the novel contingent ...
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Peace Through Democratization?

1998
Is successful democratic transition an effective tool for building international peace? Overall, the evidence presented in this book suggests a positive answer to this question. Although it does not contribute to the aggressiveness of transitional regimes, the successful process of democratization typically exerts no pacifying influence on foreign ...
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