New Books in Political Science

Wolfgang Wagner, "The Democratic Politics of Military Interventions" (Oxford UP, 2020)

Nov 10, 2025
Wolfgang Wagner, a Professor of International Security at the University of Amsterdam, dives into the intricate relationship between party politics and military interventions. He challenges the notion that foreign affairs are free from political contestation, showcasing how political parties across the left-right spectrum frame military actions differently. Discussions include the persistent contestation in U.S. foreign policy, the ideological divides affecting party positions, and the importance of party competition for democratic accountability.
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ANECDOTE

Light Opening Remark

  • Wolfgang briefly jokes about shopping and Stitch Fix at the start of the interview.
  • The remark humanizes the episode before the substantive discussion begins.
INSIGHT

Parties Shape Foreign Policy Choices

  • Political parties shape foreign policy because governments are party politicians with differing visions and justifications for force.
  • Who governs matters because parties constrain choices and infuse institutions with ideology.
INSIGHT

Institutions Depend On Party Actors

  • Democratic institutions matter, but they only work as expected given the actors who fill them.
  • Political parties are essential intermediaries that give democratic constraints real content.
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