Oil wealth and US public support for war
Oil wealth and US public support for war
How does the oil wealth of a potential target state affect the likelihood of the US public favoring the use of military force? Recent studies suggest that public opinion on foreign policy is responsive to the core characteristics of target states, such as regime type and majority religion. This article advances this research agenda by examining the effects of intra-regime heterogeneity in respect of an important characteristic of target states: their oil wealth. To examine the relationship between oil wealth and US public opinion on war, we fielded a conjoint experiment with US citizens. Respondents chose between hypothetical pairs of target states that varied across seven different intra-regime characteristics. We found that that the oil wealth of a target exerts a statistically significant (albeit small) effect on public support for the use of force, independent of the effects of other regime characteristics.
experiment, foreign policy, democracy promotion, public opinion, war, peace, public support for war, military attack, democracy, Autocracy, conjoint experiment, political institutions
3-19
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Gildea, Ross
f52a24c8-4687-413c-a590-b950b0d91129
January 2021
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Gildea, Ross
f52a24c8-4687-413c-a590-b950b0d91129
Muradova, Lala and Gildea, Ross
(2021)
Oil wealth and US public support for war.
Conflict Management and Peace Science, 38 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/0738894219871655).
Abstract
How does the oil wealth of a potential target state affect the likelihood of the US public favoring the use of military force? Recent studies suggest that public opinion on foreign policy is responsive to the core characteristics of target states, such as regime type and majority religion. This article advances this research agenda by examining the effects of intra-regime heterogeneity in respect of an important characteristic of target states: their oil wealth. To examine the relationship between oil wealth and US public opinion on war, we fielded a conjoint experiment with US citizens. Respondents chose between hypothetical pairs of target states that varied across seven different intra-regime characteristics. We found that that the oil wealth of a target exerts a statistically significant (albeit small) effect on public support for the use of force, independent of the effects of other regime characteristics.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 September 2019
Published date: January 2021
Keywords:
experiment, foreign policy, democracy promotion, public opinion, war, peace, public support for war, military attack, democracy, Autocracy, conjoint experiment, political institutions
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 506996
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506996
ISSN: 0738-8942
PURE UUID: edcdfeee-dd88-41d4-8ded-5ae6dc36692b
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Date deposited: 25 Nov 2025 17:38
Last modified: 26 Nov 2025 03:09
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Contributors
Author:
Lala Muradova
Author:
Ross Gildea
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