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The Democratic Peace Theory Reframed: The Impact of Modernity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Azar Gat
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv University
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This article argues that the democratic peace theorists have overlooked the defining development that underlies that peace of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: the industrial-technological revolution. Not only did that revolution make democracy on a country scale possible; it also made all the countries that experienced the revolution—democratic and nondemocratic—far less belligerent in comparison with preindustrial times. The democratic peace did not exist among premodern democratic and republican city-states, not because they were not democratic or liberal enough but because they were premodern. Other factors that have emanated from the modern transformation and may generate greater aversion to war apply mostly to liberal democratic countries while being only variably connected to their regime. Such factors include the staggering rise in the standard of living; the decrease in hardship, pain, and death; the dominance of metropolitan life and the service economy; the spread of the consumer and entertainment society; sexual promiscuity; women's franchise; and the shrinking ratio of young males in the population.

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Research Article
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Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 2005

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References

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8 This was originally demonstrated by Domke (fn. 1); and impressively elaborated by Russett and Oneal (fn. 2).

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16 Bruce Russett and William Antholis, “The Imperfect Democratic Peace of Ancient Greece,” reprinted in Russett (fn. 1), chap. 3.

17 Weart, Spencer, Never at War: Why Democracies Will Not Fight One Another (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998)Google Scholar. This was criticized by Eric Robinson, a leading expert on early Greek democracies; , Robinson, “Reading and Misreading the Ancient Evidence for Democratic Peace” Journal of Peace Research 38 (September 2001)Google Scholar, resulting in a short exchange in the same issue: Weart, 609–13; Robinson, 615–17. See also the criticism by the leading authority on the Greek polis and fourth-century BC Athenian democracy: Hansen, Mogens and Nielsen, Thomas, An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 8485Google Scholar.

18 Weart (fn. 17) postpones any mention of the first Athenian Empire to as late in his book as possible and then summarily disposes of this inconvenience (p. 246). The problem was better acknowledged by Russett and Antholis (fn. 17); Bachteler, Tobias, “Explaining the Democratic Peace: The Evidence from Ancient Greece Reviewed” Journal of Peace Research 34 (August 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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26 Small and Singer (fn. 25), 156–57, 198–201; Levy (fn. 25), 136–37, 150–68; Luard (fn. 25), 67–81.

27 John Mueller overlooks the decline of war in the century before 1914 and fails to account for the deeper sources of the “obsolescence”; , Mueller, Retreat from Doomsday: The Obsolescence of Major War (New York: Basic Books, 1989)Google Scholar. Lars-Erik Cederman detects a decline in belligerency among nonde-mocracies after 1945, but the main decline occurred in comparison with the pre-1815 period, which he does not examine. His “learning mechanism” also has no apparent motivating factor; , Cederman, “Back to Kant: Reinterpreting the Democratic Peace as a Macro historical Learning Process” American Political Science Review 95 (March 2001)Google Scholar.

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36 Bill Bishop, “Who Goes to War,” Washington Post, November 16, 2003. After this article was submitted for review, demographic data were released by the Pentagon, confirming the trend: Ann Scott Tyson, “Youths in Rural U.S. Are Drawn to Military,” Washington Post, November 10, 2005. Despite its title, this article emphasizes the recruits' poor economic background (a significant point to be sure) but not their rural roots.

37 Rosecrance (fn. 23), xii and also 26 for the other major industrial countries; Gilpin, Robert, The Challenge of Global Capitalism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000), 33Google Scholar.

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42 Mitchell (fn. 33), sec. B2, esp. 37, 52. Edward Luttwak argues that with fewer children per family, parents are much more reluctant to accept the loss of children in war; , Luttwak, “Blood and Computers: The Crisis of Classical Military Power in Advanced Postindustrialist Societies,” in Maoz, Zeev and Gat, Azar, eds., War in a Changing World (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001)Google Scholar. This argument does not withstand scrutiny, however; see Azar Gat's critique, also in Maoz and Gat (pp. 88–89).

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47 Knock, Thomas, To End All Wars: Woodrow Wilson and the Quest for a New World Order (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), 2628Google Scholar; and generally, Smith, Tony, America's Mission: The United States and Worldwide Struggle for Democracy in the Twentieth Century (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994)Google Scholar, chap. 3.

48 Cf. very similarly Fukuyama, Francis, State Building: Governance and World Order in the Twenty-first Century (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2004), 3839Google Scholar, 92–93.