Chú thích Thuyết_hòa_bình_dân_chủ

  1. Michael Doyle's pioneering work "Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs", Philosophy and Public Affairs (1983) 205, 207–208, initially applied this international relations paradigm to what he called "Liberal states" which are identified as entities "with some form of representative democracy, a market economy based on private property rights, and constitutional protections of civil and political rights." This theory has been alternately referred to as the "Liberal peace theory" For example, Clemens Jr., Walter C. Complexity Theory as a Tool for Understanding and Coping with Ethnic Conflict and Development Issues in Post-Soviet Eurasia. International Journal of Peace Studies.
  2. Hegre, Håvard, Tanja Ellington, Scott Gates, and Nils Petter Gleditsch (2001). “Towards A Democratic Civil Peace? Opportunity, Grievance, and Civil War 1816–1992”. American Political Science Review. 95: 33–48.Quản lý CS1: nhiều tên: danh sách tác giả (liên kết) Ray, James Lee (2003). A Lakatosian View of the Democratic Peace Research Program From Progress in International Relations Theory, edited by Colin and Miriam Fendius Elman. MIT Press. Liên kết ngoài trong |title= (trợ giúp)