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Comparative Political Studies
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Ties that Bind?

Domestic and International Conflict Behavior in Zaire

WILL H. MOORE

Florida State University

DAVID R. DAVIS

Emory University

In this article, the authors develop and empirically evaluate a general model of the linkages between domestic and international conflict behavior. Much of the literature on domestic international interactions has focused on the structural constraints of the international and domestic systems on leaders' foreign policy decisions. Rather than focusing on structural constraints, the present authors model the influence of the behavior of domestic and international rivals on leader decision making. The impact of rivals' behavior on conflict across the domestic-international nexus has been neglected relative to the role of structural factors. This study helps redress that imbalance. The authors test their model with a statistical analysis of Zaire during the period 1975 to 1992 and find substantial support for the model.

Comparative Political Studies, Vol. 31, No. 1, 45-71 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/0010414098031001003


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