Peace Science Society (International)


Papers Presented at Rice Univ./Texas A&M Meeting

Oct. 25-7, 1996

The papers delivered at the 29th meeting of the Peace Science Society (International) was hosted jointly by Rice University and Texas A&M University Oct. 25-7, 1996. These papers are not available from the Society, and those interested in obtaining copies should contact the author(s).

Dina Alsowayel, Rice University, Do They or Don't They ... Only the Target Knows for Sure
Marina Arbetman, Tulane University, The Politics of Economic Recovery from Conflict
D. Scott Bennett, Penn State University, Rivalries and Termination in the New MID Dataset
Harry Bliss, Yale University, and Bruce Russett, Yale University, Democratic Trading Partners: The Liberal Connection
Sean Bolks, Rice University, Threat, Regime Type, and the Choice of Security Policy: A General Model of Foreign Policy Substitution
Steven J. Brams, New York University, and David Denoon, New York University, Fair Division: A New Approach to the Spratly Islands Controversy
Sam-man Chung, National Defense Staff College, Seoul, and David Kinsella, University of Missouri-Columbia, Modeling the US-Soviet Arms Race as an Error-Correction Process
David H. Clark, Florida State University, Receiving Costly Signals with Both Eyes Shut
Mark Crescenzi, University of Illinois, Uncertainty in Democratic Transitions: A Game-Theoretic Analysis
Ray Dacey, University of Idaho, Dissatisfaction and the Illicit Response, Part II
Vesna Danilovic, Texas A&M University, The Failure of Extended Deterrence between Major Powers
David R. Davis, Emory University, and Brett Ashley Leeds, Emory University, Raise, Call or Fold? Decision Making in International Crises
William J. Dixon, University of Arizona, Bradford S. Jones, University of Arizona, and Mark J. Mullenbach, University of Arizona, Exits, Quagmires, and the Vietnam Syndrome
Gideon Doron, Tel-Aviv University, and Martin Sherman, Tel-Aviv University, 'Political' Peace vs. 'Economic' Peace: Democratic Reform vs. Economic Development as Inducement to Stability
Andrew Enterline, Binghamton University, Major Power Leaders, Regime Changes, and War
Joe Eyerman, Florida State University, and James Lee Ray, Florida State University, Measuring Democracy and Its Relationship to Peace
Erik Gartzke, University of Iowa, Contracts Between Friends? Counterintuitive Determinants of Alliance Formation
Robin Gault, Emory University, Alliance Formation and State Behavior: A Signaling Game
Christopher Gelpi, Harvard University, Democratic Diversions: Governmental Structure and the Externalization of Domestic Conflict
Douglas Gibler, Vanderbilt University, From Minor Disputes to Enduring Rivalries: Explaining Continuity and Change in Rival Relationships
Robert A. Hart, Florida State University, and William Reed, Florida State University, Democracy, Status Quo Satisfaction, and Militarized Interstate Disputes
Haavard Hegre, PRIO, Tanja Ellingsen, Univeristy of Maryland, Monica Jacobsen, George Mason University, Nils Petter Gleditsch, PRIO, and Arvid Raknerud, University of Oslo, Regime Type, Regime Transitions, and Civil War, 1945-1994
Uk Heo, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and Karl R. DeRouen, Jr., ECAAR-Israel, Military Expenditures, Technological Change, and Economic Growth in the East Asian NICs
Walter Isard, Cornell University, Economic Cooperation Between the Koreas: A Yesable Proposition Possibility
Patrick James, Iowa State University, and Jeff Ling, Iowa State University, The Role of Space in Crisis
Volker Krause, University of Michigan, and Jeff Keating, University of Michigan, You Don't Always Get What You Want: Exploring the Effectiveness of Economic Sanctions in US Foreign Policy, 1945-1995
Michael E. Lebrun, University of Maryland, The Balance of Offensive and Defensive Military Technologies: Myths and Realities about Conflict Initiation
Sang-Hyun Lee, University of Illinois, Regional Conflicts in Global Perspective: Prospect for Peace after the Cold War
Brett Ashley Leeds, Emory University, Believe It or Not: Domestic Political Institutions, Credible Commitments, and International Relations
Russell Leng, Middlebury College, Comparing Superpower and Minor Power Learning in Recurrent Crises: The US-USSR and Israeli-Egyptian Experiences
Zeev Maoz, Tel-Aviv University, The Strategic Behavior of Nations, 1816-1990
James Meernik, University of North Texas, and Michael Ault, University of North Texas, Public Support for U.S. Presidents' Foreign Policies
Will H. Moore, Uiversity of California at Riverside, Repression and Co-optation: The Dynamics of State-Dissident Interactions
T. Clifton Morgan, Rice University, and Glenn Palmer, Binghamton University, Alliance Portfolios, Defense Spending and Foreign Policy: Have I Got a Deal for You
James Morrow, Hoover Institution, Randolph Siverson, University of California at Davis, and Tressa Tabares, University of California at Davis, Trade and Conflict Among the Major Powers, 1907-1965
Micheal Mousseau, Binghamton University, Testing the Bonds of the Pacific Alliance: Democracy and the Expansion of Militarized Interstate Disputes, 1816-1992
Robert Muncaster, University of Illinois, Richardson's Arms Race Viewed as a Decision Process
Kevin P. Murrin, Ohio State University, Alliance Formation and Economic Gains: The Great Power Trading System, 1815-1980
Jonathan Nitzan, Bank Credit Research Group, and Shimshon Bichler, Yezreel Academic College, Differential Accumulation and Middle East "Energy Conflicts"
Sherry Bennett Quinones, Rice University, and Kei-Mu Yi, Rice University, The Dynamics of Economic Growth, Redistribution and Political Rivalries: Modeling the Timing of Conflict in the Middle East
Patrick Regan, University of Canterbury (NZ), To Intervene or Not to Intervene: That is the Question
Dan Reiter, Emory University, and Allan Stam, Yale University, Democracy, War Initiation and Victory
Kani Sathasivam, Texas A&M University, An Empirical Evaluation of a Multi-Nation Arms Race Model
Stuart B. Schneiderman, Florida State University, Is There an Internal Democratic Peace? Examining the Relationship Between Civil Wars and Regime Types
Valerie Schwebach, University of Nebraska, What Price Peace? The Consequences of Domestic Politics for Conflict Management
Carlos Seiglie, Rutgers University-Newark, and Mario Pastore, Cornell University, The Effects of Trade on Military Spending
Paul D. Senese, Vanderbilt University, Escalation and Regime Type: Explaining the Non-Pacifying Effect of Joint Democracy Between Dispute and War
Eric Siegel, University of California at Davis, Are Republican Governments Fundamentally Different?
Alastair Smith, Washington University at St. Louis, Statistical Inference in Deterrence Situations
Christopher Sprecher, Michigan State University, Opportunities, Willingness, and the Honoring of Alliance Commitments
Jaroslav Tir, University of Illinois, and Paul F. Diehl, University of Illinois, Demographic Pressures and Conflict: Linking Population to Interstate Disputes and War
John A. Tures, Florida State University, Give Diplomacy a Change: Nonmilitarized Responses in Small State Disputes
Marc Turetzky, Florida State University, Domestic Politics and U.S. Foreign Policy: Evaluating (a) Model(s) of U.S. Intervention in Minor Power Conflicts, 1945-1993
John P. Vanzo, Florida State University, Border Configuration and Conflict: Vindicating L.F. Richardson's Concept of Territorial Compactness
John A. Vasquez, Vanderbilt University, Territorial Issues and the Probability of War: A Data-Based Analysis
Michael D. Ward, University of Colorado, and Kristian S. Gleditsch, University of Colorado, Double Take on Democracy
Murray Wolfson, California State University at Fullerton, "And" vs. "Or" in Politics and Economics
Dina A. Zinnes, University of Illinois, Comparing the Logics of Theories of War

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Last Updated: 12/04/96 9:05 AM