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3 Eur. Rev. Int'l Stud. 5 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/epnrvwo3 and id is 1 raw text is: Articles

THE POWER OF PERCEPTION -
DEMOCRATIC PEACE THEORY AND
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR*
Carsten Rauch
Peace Research Institute Frankfurt
Abstract: The American Civil War is one of the favoured examples of scholars aiming to
show the spuriousness of the claim that democracies do not fight each other. While proponents
of democratic peace theory (DPT) point to the fact that the theory in its mainstream version
does not cover intrastate wars and also question whether the slave-holding Confederate States
of America can be classified as a democracy, this article takes a different approach. Using
insights from the perceptional interpretation of DPT and interpreting discourses and speeches
from the North as well as the South, I will show that a closer look at the case reveals it is very
much in line with DPT and underlines rather than undermines the logic of the democratic
peace.
Keywords: Democratic Peace Theory, American Civil War, Perception, IR Theory
INTRODUCTION
The democratic peace (DP) has been hailed by some as being as close to anything
IR has to offer resembling an empirical law.1 At the same time others still deny that
there is anything like a democratic peace theory (DPT), rather talking about a thesis
or proposition, and that there is a democratic peace at all. Starting from the most
prominent formulation of DPT which holds that democratic states do not wage war
against each other critics often point to (alleged) deviant cases that seem to falsify the
theory. The usual response by proponents of DPT has been to deny the applicability
of democratic peace theory to the specific case and to modify their central hypothesis
to democratic states almost never wage war against each other.
I believe that both, critics and defenders of DPT, are missing something in
their approach: The critics too readily and too conveniently overlook that some
of their crown witnesses are hardly fitting cases. For example, to classify imperial
*The author would like to thank Annika Elena Poppe, Elvira Rosert, Marco Fey and Konstanze Jangling as well as
the two anonymous reviewers of the European Review ofInternational Studies for many helpful comments
1 Jack S. Levy, 'Domestic Politics and War', Journal ofInterdisciplinary History, Vol. 18, No. 4 (1988), pp. 653-
73.

Rauch: The Power of Perception, ERIS Vol. 3, Issue 1/2016, pp. 5-30

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