
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Legislatures Legislatures
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Legislatures as Institutional Constraints Legislatures as Institutional Constraints
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Oversight Mechanisms Oversight Mechanisms
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Political Parties Political Parties
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Do Party Politics Stop at the Water’s Edge? Do Party Politics Stop at the Water’s Edge?
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Doves and Hawks Doves and Hawks
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International Political Economy International Political Economy
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Agenda for Future Research Agenda for Future Research
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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17 Legislatures, Political Parties, and Foreign Policy
Get accessTapio Raunio is a Professor of Political Science at Tampere University. His research interests cover representative democracy and political institutions, both in the context of national politics and at the European level, with a specific focus on legislatures, executives, political parties, and foreign policy decision-making.
Wolfgang Wagner is a Professor of International Security at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. His research revolves around the democratic politics of foreign policy and the use of force in particular. Recent publications include The Democratic Politics of Military Interventions: Political Parties, Contestation and Decisions to Use Force Abroad (Oxford University Press, 2020).
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Published:22 February 2024
Cite
Abstract
Legislatures and political parties are key elements of democratic politics. In the wake of the Democratic Peace debate, legislatures in particular have received ample attention from International Relations scholars. Research in Foreign Policy Analysis, however, has qualified notions of them as effective institutional constraints on bellicose executives. Drawing on research in Comparative Politics, this research has instead pointed to the close cooperation between executives and majorities in the legislature as well as to the importance of political parties in politicizing external relations. Political parties differ systematically over free trade, development aid, and the appropriateness of using armed force abroad. While the left-/right-dimension captures these differences best, a socio-cultural new politics dimension is likely to become more important in the future.
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