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First published online January 15, 2017

Even Generals Need Friends: How Domestic and International Reactions to Coups Influence Regime Survival

Abstract

Signals from domestic and international actors have been shown to influence the likelihood of coups. Coups remain difficult to predict and consequently leave policy makers in a reactive stance, but little systematic work assesses how these reactions influence long-term outcomes. We examine how reactions from domestic and international actors influence the duration of coup-born regimes, arguing that negative reactions will shorten leadership duration. We further probe these relationships by considering how signaling consistency, Cold War dynamics, and precoup relationships condition the influence of reactions on leadership duration. Tests use events data to capture domestic and international reactions and newly coded information on leadership to capture leader duration. Results indicate that international responses have a profound influence on leadership tenure, especially those from strong actors. We find tentative support that state reactions have the strongest effect during the Cold War, while international organizations matter the most afterward.

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Article first published online: January 15, 2017
Issue published: August 2018

Keywords

  1. political survival
  2. democratization
  3. international organization
  4. economic sanctions

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Clayton Thyne
Department of Political Science, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA
Jonathan Powell
Department of Political Science, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
Sarah Parrott
Independent Researcher
Emily VanMeter
Department of Political Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

Notes

Jonathan Powell, Department of Political Science, University of Central Florida, 4297 Andromeda Loop N Orlando, FL 32816, USA. Email: [email protected]

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