从公民到士兵:军事行动的动员、成本认知和支持

IF 1.7 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Journal of Global Security Studies Pub Date : 2022-07-23 DOI:10.1093/jogss/ogac017
Jessica D. Blankshain, Lindsay P. Cohn, D. Kriner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,政策制定者一直假设,学者们也一直在争论,政府如何增加军事人力会通过两种明显的机制影响公众对军事行动的支持:任何特定个人受到冲突影响的可能性,以及冲突的预期总成本。成本的增加被认为会导致公众对使用军事力量更加不满。但真的是这样吗?在美国的背景下,我们通过一项调查实验获得了这个问题的杠杆作用,该实验允许我们比较对一系列人力政策的反应——全志愿常备军、征兵和预备役动员——并明确测试多种机制——承担个人成本的预期、总成本的预期,以及这些成本预期无法解释的影响。我们的研究结果强烈表明,人力政策的影响并不是直截了当的。与之前的研究一致,我们发现征兵的预期降低了公众对军事行动的支持。然而,动员储备并没有减少支持,尽管事实上它也应该影响更多的人,并预示着更大的冲突。虽然伤亡估计数(代替规模)与特派团支助负相关,但个人费用预期却不是。此外,人力待遇之间的许多差异都不能用经过测试的成本机制来解释,这表明规范和价值观的作用。这些发现对旨在给决策者施加政治成本的军事人力政策是否可能奏效以及对公众对军事行动的支持进行更广泛的讨论具有重要意义。
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Citizens to Soldiers: Mobilization, Cost Perceptions, and Support for Military Action
Policymakers have long assumed, and scholars have long argued, that how a government raises military manpower affects public support for military action through two obvious mechanisms: the likelihood any given individual will be personally affected by the conflict, and the expected aggregate cost of the conflict. Increased costs are thought to cause the public to be more critical of the use of military force. But do they? We gain leverage on this question in the US context by employing a survey experiment that allows us both to compare reactions to a range of manpower policies—an all-volunteer standing force, conscription, and mobilization of the reserves—and to explicitly test multiple mechanisms—expectations of bearing personal cost, expectations of aggregate cost, and effects not explained by these cost expectations. Our results strongly suggest that manpower policies’ effects are not straightforward. Consistent with previous studies, we find that an expectation of conscription lowers public support for military action. Mobilization of the reserves, however, fails to diminish support, despite the fact that it should also affect more people and signal a larger conflict. While casualty estimates (proxy for scale) are negatively correlated with mission support, personal cost expectations are not. Furthermore, much of the variation between manpower treatments is not explained by either tested cost mechanism, suggesting a role for norms and values. These findings have implications for whether military manpower policies designed to impose political costs on policymakers are likely to work and for wider discussions of public support for military operations.
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来源期刊
Journal of Global Security Studies
Journal of Global Security Studies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
34
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