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scholars have long searched for the economic determinants of intervention behavior in the economic theories of imperialism. In this endeavor, few considered economic liberalism as a venue. Intervention studies, on the other hand, systematically lacked a conceptual and theoretical framework that discusses explicitly what intervention is and why states build interest in strangers' conflicts. This book takes over this task. Its approach to liberalism as a paradigm that can explain several forms of state behavior, including forceful and peaceful ones, will be an unusual starting point for some of us. Yet the book's ability to bring together several different literatures in international security and international relations theory in a new model of intervention will pose compelling questions for a new generation of security scholars.
These pieces would not come together if it was not for the outstanding scholarship of several people whose work has profoundly influenced this book. Prominent among these is Patrick Regan. Many aspects of the book, including its title, were inspired by Pat's Civil Wars and Foreign Powers. Pat's mentorship throughout these years remained a tremendous force in my professional development and my understanding of intervention. I am truly indebted to him for all his encouragement in this project as well as in others that I have engaged in my career. Benjamin Fordham was instrumental in the formulation of the ideas presented here and provided invaluable feedback in the project's initial stages. I wish I could write this book with the skill that he has written “Revisionism Reconsidered.” David H. Clark's work on foreign policy substitution played a major role in the multinomial choice models adopted in this book. I also took several methodology courses with Dave that he taught with supreme clarity and rigor. I hope the quantitative chapters will live up to his expectations.
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