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Nation-Building through War

Nicholas Sambanis, Stergios Skaperdas and William Wohlforth
Additional contact information
Nicholas Sambanis: Department of Political Science, Yale University
William Wohlforth: Department of Government, Dartmouth College University

No 141509, Working Papers from University of California-Irvine, Department of Economics

Abstract: How do the outcomes of international wars affect domestic social change? In turn, how do changing patterns of social identification and domestic conflict affect a nation's military capability? Models that link structural variables, power politics, and the individuals that constitute states are in problematically short supply. We begin to address this gap with a model that draws on experimental results in social psychology and behavioral economics to recapture a lost building block of the classical realist theory of statecraft: the connections between the outcomes of international wars, patterns of social identification and domestic conflict, and the nation's future war-fighting capability. We show that, when inter-state war can significantly increase a state's international status at the expense of its competitor, peace is less likely to prevail in equilibrium because, by winning a war and raising the nation's status, leaders induce individuals to identify nationally, thereby reducing internal conflict by increasing investments in state capacity. In certain settings, it is only through the anticipated social change that victory can generate that leaders can unify their nation; and the higher anticipated payoffs to national unification makes leaders fight international wars that they would otherwise choose not to fight. We use the case of German unification after the Franco-Prussian war to demonstrate the modell's value-added and illustrate the interaction between social identification, nationalism, state-building and the power-politics of interstate war.

Keywords: State capacity; Identity; Nationalism; Conflict (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D73 D74 F50 H10 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 56 pages
Date: 2014-12
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Journal Article: Nation-Building through War (2015) Downloads
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