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      Introducing Archigos: A Dataset of Political Leaders

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      Journal of Peace Research
      SAGE Publications

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          Democracy and Development

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            The political economy of dictatorship

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              War and the Survival of Political Leaders: A Comparative Study of Regime Types and Political Accountability

              We seek to answer the question, What effect does international war participation have on the ability of political leaders to survive in office? We develop a model of political reliability and derive seven related hypotheses from it that anticipate variation in the time a national political leader will survive in office after the onset of a war. Drawing upon a broadly based data set on state involvement in international war between 1816 and 1975, our expectations are tested through censored Weibull regression. Four of the hypotheses are tested, and all are supported by the analysis. We find that those leaders who engage their nation in war subject themselves to a domestic political hazard that threatens the very essence of the office-holdinghomo politicus, the retention of political power. The hazard is mitigated by longstanding experience for authoritarian elites, an effect that is muted for democratic leaders, while the hazard is militated by defeat and high costs from war for all types of leaders. Additionally, we find that authoritarian leaders are inclined to war longer after they come to power than democratic leaders. Further, democratic leaders select wars with a lower risk of defeat than do their authoritarian counterparts.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Peace Research
                Journal of Peace Research
                SAGE Publications
                0022-3433
                1460-3578
                March 2009
                March 2009
                : 46
                : 2
                : 269-283
                Article
                10.1177/0022343308100719
                80fd2c02-cd75-47d4-9350-8e50c4c64b3b
                © 2009
                History

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