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![]() American Journal of Political ScienceVolume 51 Issue 3, Pages 583 - 601 Published Online: 19 Jun 2007 © 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Published on behalf of the Midwest Political Science Association
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 2066K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Disputes, Democracies, and Dependencies: A Reexamination of the Kantian Peace Ward's research was supported by grants from the Methods, Measurement, and Statistics Program at the National Science Foundation, numbers SES-0417559 and SES-0631531. This research greatly benefitted from many helpful suggestions from Kristin M. Bakke, Nathaniel Beck, Bear F. Braumoeller, Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, John R. Freeman, Jeff Gill, Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, Peter D. Hoff, Gary King, Aseem Prakash, Adrian Raftery, Dennis L. Ward, Anton Westveld, and Erik Wibbels. David Callaway and John E. Daniels of the Social Science Data Service at the Institute of Governmental Affairs at the University of California, Davis were especially helpful to us at a critical point in our quest for distributed computing resources, which we found at the San Diego Supercomputer Center at the University of California, San Diego. We thank Chris Adolph for sharing his code for "ropeladder" plots (http://faculty.washington.edu/cadolph/code.shtml). Finally, we thank reviewers for helpful and invigorating comments.
Copyright 2007, Midwest Political Science Association ABSTRACTMilitarized interstate disputes are widely thought to be less likely among democratic countries that have high levels of trade and extensive participation in international organizations. We reexamine this broad finding of the Kantian peace literature in the context of a model that incorporates the high degree of dependency among countries. Based on in-sample statistical tests, as well as out-of-sample, predictive cross-validation, we find that results frequently cited in the literature are plagued by overfitting and cannot be characterized as identifying the underlying structure through which international conflict is influenced by democracy, trade, and international governmental organizations. We conclude that much of the statistical association typically reported in this literature apparently stems from three components: (1) geographical proximity, (2) dependence among militarized interstate disputes with the same initiator or target, and (3) the higher-order dependencies in these dyadic data. Once these are incorporated, covariates associated with the Kantian peace tripod lose most of their statistical power. We do find that higher levels of joint democracy are associated with lower probabilities of militarized interstate dispute involvement. We find that despite high statistical significance and putative substantive importance, none of the variables representing the Kantian tripod is associated with any substantial degree of predictive power. |
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