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Leashing the “Dogs of War”: Law of War Norms, Military Culture, and Restraint Toward Civilians in War

<p>What determines variation in military behavior toward civilians? In this dissertation, I examine the determinants of military behavior toward civilians, exploring the factors that lead armed groups to brutalize—or respect—civilian populations. I argue that military cultures embodying norms of civilian immunity can shape combatant preferences and, ultimately, military conduct, leading to battlefield restraint toward civilians. Focusing on case studies of the U.S. Army in Vietnam and Iraq and the Ugandan military, I examine the effect of military culture on conflict behavior utilizing detailed qualitative and quantitative data at macro- and micro-levels of analysis, including historical case studies, combatant survey data, field interviews, and a quantitative analysis of U.S. Army war crimes prosecution data. I find that military culture can fundamentally transform the preferences of combatants at all levels of the military organization, increasing combatants’ preferences for respect for civilians and producing restraint toward civilians in conflict. The findings of this research thus show that military cultures based in norms of civilian immunity can lead to the protection of civilians in war, even in the face of significant countervailing pressures that would otherwise produce mass civilian victimization.</p> / Dissertation

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/11383
Date January 2015
CreatorsBell, Andrew Michael
ContributorsFeaver, Peter D., Downes, Alexander B.
Source SetsDuke University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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