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Law’s Impact … Compared to What? Insights from Drone Strikes Law’s Impact … Compared to What? Insights from Drone Strikes
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Background on Drone Strikes: Law, Military Effectiveness, and the Public Background on Drone Strikes: Law, Military Effectiveness, and the Public
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Debating Drones: Research Design Debating Drones: Research Design
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Looking for Law vs. Effectiveness: Results Looking for Law vs. Effectiveness: Results
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Putting the Results in Their Outside Context: Bringing in Media Coverage Putting the Results in Their Outside Context: Bringing in Media Coverage
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Getting at Legal Mechanisms Getting at Legal Mechanisms
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Real-World Knowledge of International Law and Preferences toward Wartime Conduct Real-World Knowledge of International Law and Preferences toward Wartime Conduct
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A More “Knowledgeable” Design: Survey Evidence of International Law and Violence A More “Knowledgeable” Design: Survey Evidence of International Law and Violence
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Outcomes: Attitudes toward Violence Outcomes: Attitudes toward Violence
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Main Explanation: Knowled ge of International Law Main Explanation: Knowled ge of International Law
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Legal Knowledge and Wartime Preferences: Results Legal Knowledge and Wartime Preferences: Results
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Conditional Relationships between Legal Knowledge and Preferences Conditional Relationships between Legal Knowledge and Preferences
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Investigating Mechanisms and Additional Implications Investigating Mechanisms and Additional Implications
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6 From Law to Preferences II: Droning on about War
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Published:August 2024
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Abstract
This chapter examines the international law's ability to influence policy preferences, broadening the scope beyond the controversial topic of torture. It traces earlier survey experiments demonstrating that international laws could causally change public support for torture, showing that the ordinary public engages with legalized commitments in ways that support the international legal system. It also introduces two complementary studies. The first set of studies uses survey experiments and focuses on the real-world policy debate over drone strikes, while the second set moves beyond the experimental setting and investigates how real-world exposure to and understanding of legal principles affect public preferences regarding wartime behaviors. The chapter aims to assess whether the preference function of international law generalizes across different domains and offers greater realism in its analysis.
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