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A new measure of the ‘democratic peace’: what country feeling thermometer data can teach us about the drivers of American and Western European foreign policy

A new measure of the ‘democratic peace’: what country feeling thermometer data can teach us about the drivers of American and Western European foreign policy
A new measure of the ‘democratic peace’: what country feeling thermometer data can teach us about the drivers of American and Western European foreign policy
While the existence of a ‘Democratic Peace’ (DP) is widely accepted, the various DP theories that seek to explain why democracies rarely fight one another are highly contested. A ‘commercial/capitalist peace’ counterargument maintains that the relationship between democratic politics and peace is spurious: the actual driver is greater trade among democracies. Meanwhile, Realists counter that it is alliances among democratic states, not their democratic nature, that causes peace among them. This research note utilizes novel country feeling thermometer data to explore the debate’s micro-foundations: the underlying drivers of international amity and enmity among democratic citizens in the US, UK, France, and Germany. Utilizing Freedom House and other quantitative measures of freedom, trade, military strength, and racial and cultural difference, it pits the micro-foundations of the DP against its rivals to explain attitude formation among a group of Western democratic publics. Given the resurgence of authoritarianism around the world today, a better understanding of the role of regime type in shaping public opinion – and subsequently war and peace – is urgently needed.
2474-736X
Gries, Peter
c055561d-1a22-42e2-998a-2965bdb989e4
Fox, Andrew
89fbe682-9796-447b-aa0f-ed8b594fe2be
Jing, Yiming
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Mander, Matthias
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Scotto, Thomas J.
46d397ec-85ac-4a35-9020-552f4b493a77
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Gries, Peter
c055561d-1a22-42e2-998a-2965bdb989e4
Fox, Andrew
89fbe682-9796-447b-aa0f-ed8b594fe2be
Jing, Yiming
8c7563fb-212b-4654-9e4a-79ff6df2736d
Mander, Matthias
c0f0f662-7473-4d7f-ade2-306b53217c9c
Scotto, Thomas J.
46d397ec-85ac-4a35-9020-552f4b493a77
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491

Gries, Peter, Fox, Andrew, Jing, Yiming, Mander, Matthias, Scotto, Thomas J. and Reifler, Jason (2020) A new measure of the ‘democratic peace’: what country feeling thermometer data can teach us about the drivers of American and Western European foreign policy. Political Research Exchange, 2, [1716630]. (doi:10.1080/2474736x.2020.1716630).

Record type: Article

Abstract

While the existence of a ‘Democratic Peace’ (DP) is widely accepted, the various DP theories that seek to explain why democracies rarely fight one another are highly contested. A ‘commercial/capitalist peace’ counterargument maintains that the relationship between democratic politics and peace is spurious: the actual driver is greater trade among democracies. Meanwhile, Realists counter that it is alliances among democratic states, not their democratic nature, that causes peace among them. This research note utilizes novel country feeling thermometer data to explore the debate’s micro-foundations: the underlying drivers of international amity and enmity among democratic citizens in the US, UK, France, and Germany. Utilizing Freedom House and other quantitative measures of freedom, trade, military strength, and racial and cultural difference, it pits the micro-foundations of the DP against its rivals to explain attitude formation among a group of Western democratic publics. Given the resurgence of authoritarianism around the world today, a better understanding of the role of regime type in shaping public opinion – and subsequently war and peace – is urgently needed.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 February 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497030
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497030
ISSN: 2474-736X
PURE UUID: 6176fd76-12d2-43c5-b0ff-23d746e34c97
ORCID for Jason Reifler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1116-7346

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Date deposited: 10 Jan 2025 17:39
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Peter Gries
Author: Andrew Fox
Author: Yiming Jing
Author: Matthias Mander
Author: Thomas J. Scotto
Author: Jason Reifler ORCID iD

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