Title: A Democratic Peace
1A Democratic Peace?
- Paul Bacon
- SILS, Waseda University
- PH201
2Republican Liberalism
- Liberals believe that there are basically only
two different types of state in the international
system. - These are democracies and non-democracies.
- If this is true, it follows that three types of
dyadic relationship are possible. - 1. Non-democracy non-democracy.
- 2. Non-democracy democracy.
- 3. Democracy democracy.
- Can you give me examples of wars for each of
these dyadic types of international relations?
3Democratic Peace Theory
- According to Democratic peace theory (DPT),
liberal democracies never or almost never go to
war with one another. - Democratic peace theory has become influential in
the policy world in Western countries. - Scholar Jack Levy famously remarked that
democratic peace theory is the closest thing we
have to a law in international politics.
4So what!?
- War is one of the most serious problems in the
international system. - If democratic peace theory is true, then it
provides us with a way to break the realist
cycle. - This also suggests that domestic politics DO
matter. The domestic politics of a state
dictate the international relations which that
state is capable of engaging in. - Moreover, the number of democracies in the world
is increasing, and, if democratic peace theory is
correct, this suggests that the number of
conflicts will reduce. - Theoretically, if all of the countries in the
world became democratic, then the threat of war
would disappear.
5History of the theory
- The idea that democracy is a source of world
peace came relatively late. - Immanuel Kant first stated the theory of a peace
between liberal democracies in his essay
Perpetual Peace written in 1795. - At that time there were very few republics in the
Western world and none of them was truly
democratic by today's standards.
6History of the theory
- Since World War I, there has been widespread
popular rhetoric that democratic states are
peace-loving, but the idea was not systematically
studied by social science. - The gradual spread of liberal democracy in the
world in the second half of the 20th century drew
greater attention to the relationship between
democracy and peace.
7Rummels Theory
- Kants theory was expanded in the 1970s by
Rummel. - The following five propositions formed the basis
of Rummels original theory -
- 1. Democracies do not make war on each other.
- 2. The more democratic two nations are, the less
the violence between them. -
8Rummels Theory
- 3. Democracies engage in the least amounts of
foreign violence. - 4. Democracies display, by far, the least amounts
of internal violence. - 5. Modern democracies have virtually no democide.
9Democide
- According to Rummel, nearly 174,000,000 people
have been murdered by their governments in the
20th Century, 1900-1999. - This figure is over four times the number of
combat deaths in all international and domestic
wars during the same period.
10Democide
- If all these dead were to populate a nation, out
of some 190 nations in the world it would be the
sixth largest. - A related but slightly different concept is
Rummels law, which states that the less freedom
a people have, the more likely their rulers are
to murder them.
11Causes of the democratic peace?
- Many theoretical arguments have been put forward
as explanations for the democratic peace - Democracies are characterized by the RULE OF LAW,
and are therefore more likely to resolve disputes
between them through arbitration. - Democracies share A COMMON CULTURE the citizens
of democratic societies are less likely to view
the citizens of other democracies as enemies.
Because their support for war is necessary (due
to democratic decision-making), war is less
likely.
12Causes of the democratic peace?
- Democracies are INHERENTLY PEACEFUL. Wide citizen
participation ensures that decision making power
lies in the hands of those most likely to be
killed or wounded in wars, and their relatives
and friends (Rummel). - Democratic countries tend to be capitalist
states, whose TRADE RELATIONS with one another
create interdependence among them (Schumpeter). - This INTERDEPENDENCE limits the ability and
willingness of democratic nations to go to war
with each other, due to the incurred costs in
lost trade.
13Statistical Evidence
- Rummel studied all wars between 1816 and 1991. He
found 198 wars between non-democracies, 155 wars
between democracies and non-democracies, and 0
wars between democracies. - He argues that this is strongly statistically
significant. For example, during the 1946-1986
period there were 45 states that had a democratic
regime 109 that did not.
14Statistical Evidence
- There were thus 6,876 state dyads, of which 990
were democratic-democratic dyads. None of the 990
fought each other. - The probability of this lack of war between
democracies being due to chance is virtually 100
to 1.
15Statistical Evidence
- Babst (1972) concluded that no wars had been
fought between democracies between 1789 and 1941.
- Singer (1976) supported this.
- Doyle (1983) found that constitutionally secure
liberal states have yet to engage in wars with
one another. - Ray (1993, 1995) found no wars between
democracies.
16Statistical Evidence
- Maoz Abdolai (1989) analyzed all wars between
1816 and 1976 and found no wars between
democracies. - They found that this is statistically
significant. - They also found less lower-level conflicts
between democracies. - Breemer (1992) reported similar findings for the
years between 1816 and 1965.
17Definitions
- War is often defined as any military action which
results in more than 1,000 battle deaths . - This is the definition used in the authoritative
Correlates of War project at the University of
Michigan. This project identifies 2000 cases of
armed wars or other conflicts after 1816. - Democracy is defined as a stabilized liberal
democracy.
18Definitions
- - A democracy is defined as a stabilized
liberal democracy. - - Rummel requires democracies to possess certain
absolute criteria - - There should be voting rights for at least
two-thirds of all adult males. - - A democratic system should also have been in
place for more than three years.
19Definitions
- Ray has argued that
- At least 50 of the adult population is allowed
to vote. - There has been at least one peaceful,
constitutional transfer of executive power, from
one independent political party to another, by
means of an election.
20Definitions
- The most widely used data set in democratic peace
theory research is the Polity dataset, put
together by a number of scholars, most prominent
among whom is Ted Gurr. - The Polity dataset does not codify states in a
binary fashion (democracy/non-democracy) - It gives each state a democracy score and an
autocracy score for any given period.
21Criticisms of the theory
- Critics point out that democracy and peace
are essentially contested concepts. - They are difficult to operationalize for
measurement. - They are subjective, so there is a risk of
manipulation to arrive at a predetermined
conclusion.
22Criticisms of the theory
- Critics of the theory have claimed that there are
many exceptions to it - Germany during WWI
- The American Civil War
- - Finland/UK war during WWII
23Criticisms of the theory
- The criteria for liberal democracies leave very
few democracies before the late nineteenth
century. For example - During much of the period of Rummels study, the
US barely met Rummels criteria, if at all. - The UK did not qualify until after the Third
reform Bill 1888.
24Criticisms of the theory
- Critics argue that Rummel actually uses a tighter
definition of democracy than that which he
offers in his official criteria. - This leaves few democracies before the late
nineteenth century. - This makes the theory weaker, since very few
democracies mean very few possible wars between
democracies.
25Criticisms of the theory
- Rummel's requirement that democratic states must
be older than three years excludes some wars. - Rummels criteria also exclude civil wars within
democracies over legitimacy or secession, such as
the American Civil War.
26Criticisms of the theory
- The 1000 killed in battle definition excludes
attacks by one democracy on another of such
overwhelming force that there is no effective
resistance, and thus few deaths in battle. - Democracies have engaged in covert conflict
resulting in a change of regime on the losing
side. For example, the British- and
American-supported 1953 coup detat in Iran.
27Criticisms of the theory
- Correlation is not causation
- Critics have argued that peace may be explained
by other factors that are not related to
democracy. For example - Geographical isolation.
- Bloc peace theory.
28Bloc peace theory
- The bloc peace argument is offered by Joanne Gowa
in Ballots and Bullets The Elusive Democratic
Peace. - According to this argument, the STRUCTURE of the
international political system during the Cold
War was responsible for creating the illusion of
a democratic peace. - At about the same time as many of today's
democracies came into existence, the Cold War
divided much of the world into two systems of
permanent institutionalized alliances.
29Bloc peace theory
- Critics such as Gowa therefore claim that the
inter-democratic peace of the period is explained
by a larger bloc peace theory. - Almost all the democracies of the Cold War period
were members of the Western bloc, and the members
of that bloc did not go to war with each other. - The First World nations were allied with each
other, chiefly in NATO. There was very little
possibility of them attacking one another. - This was because they were united in a collective
effort to contain the bigger threat posed by
Communism.
30Bloc peace theory
- Gowa observes that the system of alliances
between the democracies was therefore produced by
this common interest. - Also, once the alliance system had come into
existence, the relations between two members of
the bloc were not permitted to decline into
full-scale war. - The alliance provided common allies with the
interest and the leverage to prevent it. - Critics of DPT therefore conclude that democratic
peace theory relies on a body of evidence drawn
disproportionately from a period dominated by the
Cold War. - During the Cold War, the division of the world
into east and west was more important than other
potential conflicts.
31Criticisms of the bloc peace theory
- Supporters of the DPT argue that according to the
logic of Gowas theory, there should therefore
have been no wars at all in the Western bloc,
including no wars involving dictatorships, and
also no wars in the opposing Communist bloc. - 1. However, there WERE several wars between
Communist nations the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan, and the Cambodian-Vietnamese War. - There were also minor conflicts, not meeting
Rummel's threshold of deaths, particularly the
Sino-Soviet border conflict, and the Prague
spring. Another possible counter-example is the
1956 Hungarian Revolution.
32Criticisms of the bloc peace theory
- 2. There were ALSO wars within the Western bloc
between democracies and dictatorships, supporters
of DPT argue, thus disproving the bloc peace
theory. - One example is the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in
1974, at a time when Cyprus had British military
bases and close ties to Turkey's NATO partner
Greece.
33Criticisms of the bloc peace theory
- 3. Supporters of DPT argue that there were many
wars between dictatorships in the third World
during the Cold War. - 4. Supporters of DPT also note that there were no
wars between democracies in the Third World
during the same period. - 5. Supporters also argue that external causes
cannot explain the continued peace between
democracies in Europe after the end of the Cold
War. - 6. There are also many democracies outside Europe
who have not fought other democracies.
34Further responses to criticism of the theory
- Maoz Russet studied the period between 1945 and
1986. They discounted all dyads that did not
involve a major power or nations that were not
geographically continuous. The DPT was still
validated. - Bremer (1992) and other studies also support this
conclusion. - Gliditsch (1995) demonstrated that democratic
dyads have not been more separated than
non-democratic dyads. - Supporters of the theory also note that today
many more nations are democratic.
35End of Lecture.
Thank you for your attention.