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POLITICAL UTILITY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   126477


Credibility paradox: violence as a double-edged sword in international politics / Abrahms, Max   Journal Article
Abrahms, Max Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Implicit in the rationalist literature on bargaining over the last half-century is the political utility of violence. Given our anarchical international system populated with egoistic actors, violence is thought to promote concessions by lending credibility to their threats. From the vantage of bargaining theory, then, empirical research on terrorism poses a puzzle. For nonstate actors, terrorism signals a credible threat in comparison with less extreme tactical alternatives. In recent years, however, a spate of studies across disciplines and methodologies has nonetheless found that neither escalating to terrorism nor with terrorism encourages government concessions. In fact, perpetrating terrorist acts reportedly lowers the likelihood of government compliance, particularly as the civilian casualties rise. The apparent tendency for this extreme form of violence to impede concessions challenges the external validity of bargaining theory, as traditionally understood. In this study, I propose and test an important psychological refinement to the standard rationalist narrative. Via an experiment on a national sample of adults, I find evidence of a newfound cognitive heuristic undermining the coercive logic of escalation enshrined in bargaining theory. Due to this oversight, mainstream bargaining theory overestimates the political utility of violence, particularly as an instrument of coercion.
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ID:   103924


Some thoughts on moral choice and war / Gray, Colin S   Journal Article
Gray, Colin S Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Right conduct and its opposite is a twin-peaked concept universal among humans. This concept is key to the political utility of military force because it helps police the potential chaos and anarchy that lurk as a possibility in the very nature of war. But, standards of right conduct in practice are not rigid. Ethics are apt to be situational and consequentialist rather than absolute. Some strategic disadvantage tends to flow from moral disadvantage, but a moral deficit alone is rarely, if ever, strategically fatal.
Key Words Ethics  Military force  Six Day War  Political Utility 
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