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ID159574
Title ProperLeadership preferences in ethno-territorial disputes
Other Title Informationan experimental approach
LanguageENG
AuthorHorowitz, Shale ;  Redd, Steven B ;  Shale Horowitz Steven B. Redd
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the conflict bargaining literature, three variables have a primary explanatory role: relative power, status quo conditions, and leadership preferences. While leadership preferences loom large in case study research, they are either absent or poorly proxied in large-N statistical studies. Using a series of three experiments, we test for the effects of relative power, status quo conditions, and leadership preferences on decisions to apply various levels of nonviolent and violent pressure in ethno-territorial disputes. The experimental designs presented in this study offer the opportunity to isolate the impact of leadership preferences on political strategy choices in ethno-territorial disputes. The results demonstrate that, at least in an experimental setting, leadership preferences are, in fact, significant predictors of political strategy choices, even after controlling for relative power and status quo conditions.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Policy Analysis Vol. 13, No.4; Oct 2017: p.950–967
Journal SourceForeign Policy Analysis 2017-12 13, 4
Key WordsExperimental Approach ;  Leadership Preferences ;  Ethno-Territorial Disputes