Journal ArticleUnknown
Securitization, Social Identity, and Democratic Security: Nixon, India, and the Ties That Bind
Authors
Author Affiliations
Georgia Institute of Technology
Published InInternational Organization
Year2012
Citations99
Abstract
Abstract The Democratic Peace stands as one of the most coherent and recognizable programs of study in international relations. Yet despite the pages of research devoted to the subject and claims about its law-like nature, the democratic peace remains a highly contested finding. In large part, this contestation arises out of an enduring question: What exactly keeps democracies from fighting? Drawing on the securitization theory of the Copenhagen School as well as social psychology, this article claims that a critical mechanism of the democratic peace lies at the political junction between policymakers and the public. I argue that the democratic identity of the public, grounded in basic democratic norms essential for the function of any democracy at any time, plays…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.