Still On The Clock : A democratic peace theory review on the US and  Venezuela conflicts between 2001 -2007

This dissertation, by using the case of tensions between the United States and Venezuela between 2001-2007, examines Rummel’s hypothesis that democratic countries are inherently peaceful, and investigates whether the tensions in US-Venezuela relations under president George W Bush and president Hugo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gharib, Christopher James William
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Stockholms universitet, Latinamerikainstitutet 2017
Subjects:
US
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-151981
Description
Summary:This dissertation, by using the case of tensions between the United States and Venezuela between 2001-2007, examines Rummel’s hypothesis that democratic countries are inherently peaceful, and investigates whether the tensions in US-Venezuela relations under president George W Bush and president Hugo Chavez confirms or rejects Rummel’s hypothesis. A review of relevant documents, reports by non-governmental organizations and previous research in the field of international relations lead us to the conclusion that while the strained relationship between the US and Venezuela did reach a stage of coercive diplomacy, as defined by Jakobsen, the threats between the two countries did not escalate towards military aggression, and therefore Rummel’s hypothesis is confirmed.