战争的议会化:解释加拿大军事部署的立法投票

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Relations Pub Date : 2023-01-31 DOI:10.1177/00471178231151904
Philippe Lagassé, Justin Massie
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引用次数: 1

摘要

军事部署的议会化是一个新兴的研究领域,但往往忽视了立法机构被剥夺任何战争权力的特殊情况。本文通过研究加拿大的奇特案例,为这一文献做出了贡献。由于加拿大政府在部署军队时不需要获得议会的支持,本文分析了为什么他们偶尔会这样做,而且越来越多地这样做。我们提出并检验了四个假设,以解释政府为什么以及何时愿意选择让议会参与没有宪法或法律义务的战争决策:行政意识形态、任务风险、少数议会和责任转移。我们的研究结果表明,意识形态和任务风险对行政部门何时邀请立法机构就加拿大的军事部署进行投票具有最强的解释和预测能力。虽然避免指责的愿望可能有助于决定举行投票,但其影响力或统计相关性并不大。就其本身而言,举行投票和进入少数派议会之间的联系是微不足道的,在统计上也不重要。
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Parliamentarizing war: explaining legislative votes on Canadian military deployments
The parliamentarization of military deployments is a burgeoning area of study but has tended to neglect the peculiar cases of legislatures deprived of any war powers. This article contributes to this literature by examining the curious case of Canada. Since Canadian governments are not required to secure parliamentary support to deploy the military, it analyzes why they occasionally have and increasingly do. We propose and test four hypotheses to explain why and when governments willingly choose to involve parliament in war decisions absent constitutional or legal obligation to do so: executive ideology, mission risk, minority parliament, and blame shifting. Our findings suggest that ideology and mission risk have the strongest explanatory and predictive power for when the executive will invite the legislature to vote on a military deployment in Canada. While the desire to avoid blame may contribute to the decision to hold a vote, this is not as influential or statistically relevant. The association between holding a vote and being in a minority parliament, for its part, is negligible and statistically insignificant.
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来源期刊
International Relations
International Relations INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: International Relations is explicitly pluralist in outlook. Editorial policy favours variety in both subject-matter and method, at a time when so many academic journals are increasingly specialised in scope, and sectarian in approach. We welcome articles or proposals from all perspectives and on all subjects pertaining to international relations: law, economics, ethics, strategy, philosophy, culture, environment, and so on, in addition to more mainstream conceptual work and policy analysis. We believe that such pluralism is in great demand by the academic and policy communities and the interested public.
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