Articles with "military intervention" as a keyword



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A pacifist ethos for the Responsibility to Protect: detaching prevention from intervention

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Published in 2019 at "International Politics"

DOI: 10.1057/s41311-017-0138-5

Abstract: The Responsibility to Protect (R2P), as a project intended to avert or end mass atrocities, incorporates both preventative and interventionist dimensions. This article begins with an overview of the place of prevention within the R2P… read more here.

Keywords: prevention; intervention; responsibility protect; military intervention ... See more keywords
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Sahelistan? Military Intervention and Patronage Politics in Afghanistan and Mali

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Published in 2020 at "Civil Wars"

DOI: 10.1080/13698249.2020.1813405

Abstract: ABSTRACT The ‘Sahelistan’ discourse that conflates conflict dynamics in Afghanistan and Mali is widespread in Western media and policy circles. We argue that such representations contribute to the adoption of one-size-fits-all conflict management policies. Drawing… read more here.

Keywords: sahelistan military; mali; intervention patronage; military intervention ... See more keywords
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Military intervention as a spectacle? Authoritarian regionalism and protests in Kazakhstan

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Published in 2023 at "International Affairs"

DOI: 10.1093/ia/iiad093

Abstract: Understanding the scope and the limits of cooperation of authoritarian regimes is important to assess their ability to support each other and strengthen authoritarian rule worldwide. While there is substantial evidence of authoritarian regimes working… read more here.

Keywords: regionalism protests; spectacle authoritarian; intervention spectacle; military intervention ... See more keywords

More Valuable than Blood and Treasure? Experimental Evidence on the Impact of Status on Domestic Preferences for Military Intervention

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Published in 2020 at "Peace Economics, Peace Science and Public Policy"

DOI: 10.1515/peps-2020-0017

Abstract: Abstract Does status have an independent effect on how countries relate to each other? While scholars long argued that status is a salient foreign policy driver, it has been challenging to establish a causal link… read more here.

Keywords: status; policy; evidence; military intervention ... See more keywords