2019
DOI: 10.1017/s1752971919000071
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Aims, claims, and the bargaining model of war

Abstract: Although in principle states can bargain over the entire extent of their combined territory, we observe historically that states bargain within far more limited confines defined by well-bounded claims. We argue that this observation stems from the fact that states generally have limited territorial aims due either to limited benefits of obtaining additional territory and/or the costs of absorbing and controlling new territories and their inhabitants. Using a formal model, we show that introducing states with l… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The role of homelands in nationalism suggests that nationalist territorial ambitions, while perhaps expansive, are not infinite; rather they are limited to the area of the homeland. As a result, nationalists' claims that their territorial demands are limited are more credible than they might otherwise be, reducing the risk to other entities of conceding to these demands, and thus facilitating conflict resolution (Schultz and Goemans 2019).…”
Section: How Do Homelands Matter?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The role of homelands in nationalism suggests that nationalist territorial ambitions, while perhaps expansive, are not infinite; rather they are limited to the area of the homeland. As a result, nationalists' claims that their territorial demands are limited are more credible than they might otherwise be, reducing the risk to other entities of conceding to these demands, and thus facilitating conflict resolution (Schultz and Goemans 2019).…”
Section: How Do Homelands Matter?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The large literature surveyed above on the consequences of territorial disputes for states' relations make clear that leaders pay a range of costs for opening new territorial claims. As Schultz and Goemans (2017) point out, we should expect leaders to carefully make bounded claims, unless they are the rare type of leader that seeks unlimited aims and are not worried about costs. 7 However, exactly how leaders make limited claims is surprisingly undertheorized.…”
Section: History Dispute Settlement and Making A Claimmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, a justification for making a claim that explicitly rests on the 'need' to expand one's borders at the expense of neighboring states is a fairly bald-faced statement of expansionism. Accordingly, territorial claims of this kind between neighboring states are quite rare, with the example of Germany in the 1930s serving as a prominent but atypical example (Schultz and Goemans, 2017).…”
Section: Precedents and The Emergence Of Territorial Claimsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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