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Papers by Jacob Wobig

Research paper thumbnail of Regional Regimes for the Defense of Democracy and

Research paper thumbnail of Defending democracy with international law: preventing coup attempts with democracy clauses

Democratization, Nov 24, 2014

In recent decades many regional inter-governmental organizations have adopted agreements committi... more In recent decades many regional inter-governmental organizations have adopted agreements committing all member states to maintain democratic governments, and specifying punishments to be levied against member states that revert to authoritarianism. These treaties have a surprisingly high enforcement rate – nearly all states subject to them that have experienced governmental succession by coup have been suspended by the relevant IGO(s). However, relatively little is known about whether these treaties are deterring coups. This article offers an original theory of how these international agreements could deter coups d’état, focusing on the way that a predictably adverse international reaction complicates the incentives of potential coup participants. An analysis of the likelihood of coups for the period of 1991–2008 shows that states subject to democracy were on average less likely to experience coups, but that this finding was not statistically significant in most models. However, when restricting the analysis to democracies, middle-income states with democracy clauses were significantly less likely to experience coup attempts. Moreover, the African democracy regime appears to be particularly effective, significantly reducing the likelihood of coup attempts for middle-income states regardless of regime type.

Research paper thumbnail of The Power Curse: Influence and Illusion in World Politics by Giulo M. Gallarotti

Research paper thumbnail of Regional regimes for the defense of democracy and coups d'etat

Research paper thumbnail of Regional Regimes for the Defense of Democracy and

Research paper thumbnail of Defending democracy with international law: preventing coup attempts with democracy clauses

Democratization, Nov 24, 2014

In recent decades many regional inter-governmental organizations have adopted agreements committi... more In recent decades many regional inter-governmental organizations have adopted agreements committing all member states to maintain democratic governments, and specifying punishments to be levied against member states that revert to authoritarianism. These treaties have a surprisingly high enforcement rate – nearly all states subject to them that have experienced governmental succession by coup have been suspended by the relevant IGO(s). However, relatively little is known about whether these treaties are deterring coups. This article offers an original theory of how these international agreements could deter coups d’état, focusing on the way that a predictably adverse international reaction complicates the incentives of potential coup participants. An analysis of the likelihood of coups for the period of 1991–2008 shows that states subject to democracy were on average less likely to experience coups, but that this finding was not statistically significant in most models. However, when restricting the analysis to democracies, middle-income states with democracy clauses were significantly less likely to experience coup attempts. Moreover, the African democracy regime appears to be particularly effective, significantly reducing the likelihood of coup attempts for middle-income states regardless of regime type.

Research paper thumbnail of The Power Curse: Influence and Illusion in World Politics by Giulo M. Gallarotti

Research paper thumbnail of Regional regimes for the defense of democracy and coups d'etat

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