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Coalitions of the willing? International backing and British public support for military action

Coalitions of the willing? International backing and British public support for military action
Coalitions of the willing? International backing and British public support for military action

Studies of public support for war highlight the importance of context. Most people do not simply support or oppose the use of force but instead assess its merits depending on various aspects of the situation. One such aspect is the extent of international backing – whether from individual states or supranational organizations – for military action. This backing may be active, notably through the contribution of troops, or more a passive matter of endorsement or authorization of action. In this article, a survey experiment embedded in a major internet survey of British foreign policy attitudes (N = 2,205) is used to explore how international backing affects public support for military action. Britain’s military potential and recent history make it an obvious case study here. Both active and endorsement backing prove to have separate and significant positive effects on support. Importantly, the absolute number of troops involved matters far less than the proportion of total troop numbers to be contributed. And the perceived strength of the enemy predicts support only when the British are to contribute a large proportion of total forces. Predispositional variables are used to investigate the sources of the experimental effects but with little success: the impact of international backing proves remarkably consistent across the sample.

internationalism, NATO, support for war, United Nations, United States
0022-3433
767-781
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Davies, Graeme A.M.
a60057a2-e466-429a-8634-a3a45fc45108
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Davies, Graeme A.M.
a60057a2-e466-429a-8634-a3a45fc45108

Johns, Robert and Davies, Graeme A.M. (2014) Coalitions of the willing? International backing and British public support for military action. Journal of Peace Research, 51 (6), 767-781. (doi:10.1177/0022343314544779).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Studies of public support for war highlight the importance of context. Most people do not simply support or oppose the use of force but instead assess its merits depending on various aspects of the situation. One such aspect is the extent of international backing – whether from individual states or supranational organizations – for military action. This backing may be active, notably through the contribution of troops, or more a passive matter of endorsement or authorization of action. In this article, a survey experiment embedded in a major internet survey of British foreign policy attitudes (N = 2,205) is used to explore how international backing affects public support for military action. Britain’s military potential and recent history make it an obvious case study here. Both active and endorsement backing prove to have separate and significant positive effects on support. Importantly, the absolute number of troops involved matters far less than the proportion of total troop numbers to be contributed. And the perceived strength of the enemy predicts support only when the British are to contribute a large proportion of total forces. Predispositional variables are used to investigate the sources of the experimental effects but with little success: the impact of international backing proves remarkably consistent across the sample.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 15 October 2014
Published date: 12 November 2014
Keywords: internationalism, NATO, support for war, United Nations, United States

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489784
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489784
ISSN: 0022-3433
PURE UUID: 81565dd5-2ce7-4676-8cc4-feb3ba0ba028
ORCID for Robert Johns: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4543-7463

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Date deposited: 02 May 2024 16:36
Last modified: 03 May 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Robert Johns ORCID iD
Author: Graeme A.M. Davies

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