Travis Nelson’s research while affiliated with University of Wisconsin–Platteville and other places

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Publications (1)


Rawls on agreeing to disagree: How democracies differ from non-democracies in justifying war
  • Article

December 2017

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25 Reads

Democracy and Security

Daniel Kapust

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Travis Nelson

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Katherine M. Robiadek

We use Rawls’s account of public reason and the Law of Peoples to test two hypotheses: democracies are more likely to invoke self-defense in justifications than non-democracies, and democracies are more likely to invoke human rights in justifications than non-democracies. Through an analysis of war justifications since 1875, we find that although democracies and non-democracies are similarly likely to use self-defense as a justification, democracies are more likely to justify war through human rights. Institutions and values centering on rights that promote domestic public justification also promote justifications compatible with those values and institutions at the international level.