The impact of military spending on the likelihood of democratic transition failure : testing two competing theories / Justin Clardie.
Material type: TextPublication details: 2011Subject(s): Online resources: In: Armed Forces & Society Vol 37 No 1, January 2011, pp.163-179 (3)Summary: Newly democratised countries have to deal with the serious possibility of authoritarian military regimes reasserting their influence. This article identifies two possible approaches (increase military spending to keep the armed forces quiet, or decrease military spending to reduce military influence and use resources for other programme such as social welfare). Data from a study of democratic transitions between 1967 and 1999 supports a corellation between decreasing military spending and decreasing risk of democratic transition failure.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Journal Article | Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals | POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Not for loan | 34528-1001 |
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POLITICS Oceania begins to stir/ | POLITICS Garbage politics/ | POLITICS, CHINA A political anatomy of China's ompliance in WTO disputes/ | POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT The impact of military spending on the likelihood of democratic transition failure : testing two competing theories / | POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Balance of power: Ukraine's foreign policy affects domestic stability/ | POPULATION The human population unbound / | POPULATION GROWTH For poor countries' youth, dashed hopes signal danger ahead / |
Newly democratised countries have to deal with the serious possibility of authoritarian military regimes reasserting their influence. This article identifies two possible approaches (increase military spending to keep the armed forces quiet, or decrease military spending to reduce military influence and use resources for other programme such as social welfare). Data from a study of democratic transitions between 1967 and 1999 supports a corellation between decreasing military spending and decreasing risk of democratic transition failure.
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