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      Domestic Political Audiences and the Escalation of International Disputes.

      American Political Science Review
      JSTOR

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          Abstract

          International crises are modeled as a political “war of attrition” in which state leaders choose at each moment whether to attack, back down, or escalate. A leader who backs down suffersaudience coststhat increase as the public confrontation proceeds. Equilibrium analysis shows how audience costs enable leaders to learn an adversary's true preferences concerning settlement versus war and thus whether and when attack is rational. The model also generates strong comparative statics results, mainly on the question of which side is most likely to back down. Publicly observable measures of relative military capabilities and relative interests prove to have no direct effect once a crisis begins. Instead, relative audience costs matter: the side with a stronger domestic audience (e.g., a democracy) is always less likely to back down than the side less able to generate audience costs (a nondemocracy). More broadly, the analysis suggests that democracies should be able to signal their intentions to other states more credibly and clearly than authoritarian states can, perhaps ameliorating the security dilemma between democratic states.

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          Job Market Signaling

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            Cooperation under the Security Dilemma

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              Evolution and the Theory of Games

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                American Political Science Review
                Am Polit Sci Rev
                JSTOR
                0003-0554
                1537-5943
                September 1994
                September 2013
                : 88
                : 03
                : 577-592
                Article
                10.2307/2944796
                f8e4f87b-7465-4a25-b536-6e6cfefad50a
                © 1994
                History

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