Synopses & Reviews
Leading scholars from the United States and the European Union examine how democracies make foreign policy when their citizens disagree about what to do. The authors focus in particular on differences of opinion between the legislature and the executive--often called "divided government"--and the constraints of public opinion on a leader's actions.
Review
"The so-called Schelling conjecture, named after Nobel laureate Thomas Schelling, is a key proposition in the applied bargaining literature. This "paradox of weakness" suggests that the weak negotiator is often more successful than its resourceful and unconstrained counterpart. This volume explores in an exemplary fashion the relevance of the Schelling conjecture and some related hypotheseson how democracies negotiate with other states and how successful they are at the bargaining table. The theoretical and empirical work presented by this truly international research team offers new challenges and is presented with hallmark rigor and sophistication. Their collective tour de force will shape the negotiation and cooperation literature for years to come."--Gerald Schneider, University of Konstanz, and Executive Editor European Union Politics
About the Author
Robert Pahre is Associate Professor of Political Science and Associate Director of the European Union Center at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Table of Contents
Divided Government and International Cooperation: An Overview--Robert Pahre * Domestic Veto Institutions, Divided Government, and the Status Quo: A Spatial Model of Two-Level Games with Complete Information--Thomas H. Hammond & Brandon Prince * Do Democracies Trade More Freely?--B. Peter Rosendorff * Divided Government and International Cooperation in the Nineteenth Century--Robert Pahre * Divided Government and the Ratification of the Amsterdam Treaty--Simon Hug & Thomas König * Divided Government and Territorial Disputes--Todd Allee & Paul Huth * Conclusion: Democracy and Foreign Policy--Robert Pahre