Democratic Peace — Warlike Democracies?

1995 European Journal of International Relations 261 citations

Abstract

Democracies are Janus-faced. While they do not fight each other, they are frequently involved in militarized disputes and wars with authoritarian regimes. The article argues that these two empirical findings on the dyadic level are under-theorized. After reviewing the prevailing explanations for the `democratic peace', the article presents a social constructivist perspective starting from the so-called normative approach. To a large degree democracies create their friends and enemies — `us' and `them' — by inferring either defensive or aggressive motives from the domestic structures of their counterparts. On the one hand, they follow behavioural norms externalizing their internal compromise-oriented and non-violent decision rules in their interactions with other democracies. On the other hand, the presumption of potential enmity creates a realist world of anarchy when democratic states interact with authoritarian regimes.

Keywords

AuthoritarianismPresumptionDemocracyCompromiseNormativePolitical economyConstructivism (international relations)SociologyPolitical sciencePositive economicsPerspective (graphical)Law and economicsInternational relationsLawPoliticsEconomics

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
1
Issue
4
Pages
491-517
Citations
261
Access
Closed

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Thomas Risse (1995). Democratic Peace — Warlike Democracies?. European Journal of International Relations , 1 (4) , 491-517. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354066195001004005

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DOI
10.1177/1354066195001004005