Single-Party Autocracies, Sanctions, and Conflict Mediation ()
ABSTRACT
Single-party autocracies are the most common type of autocracy in the world, yet research into this regime-type remains incomplete. In Autocracies as Mediators in Conflicts (
Honig, 2022), evidence indicated that single-party autocracies are statistically more likely to offer to mediate third-party internationalized military conflicts when subjected to economic sanctions than other types of autocracies (military juntas, personalist dictatorships, and both dynastic and non-dynastic monarchies), suggesting a sensitivity to domestic and global public opinion akin to democracies. This aligns with research indicating that single-party autocracies are more like democracies than other types of autocratic regimes (
Weeks, 2014). This article builds off these findings by examining the likelihood of offers of conflict mediation by single-party autocracies both before economic sanctions as well as afterwards. Utilizing a quantitative analysis, it finds statistically significant evidence that single-party autocracies are at a much greater likelihood to offer to mediate these conflicts when being subjected to economic sanctions than they would be otherwise. This aligns with the theory that single-party autocracies care about public opinion both domestically and internationally in a similar way as democracies.
Share and Cite:
Honig, J. (2025) Single-Party Autocracies, Sanctions, and Conflict Mediation.
Open Journal of Political Science,
15, 796-807. doi:
10.4236/ojps.2025.154044.
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