TY - CHAP
T1 - Voting on the use of armed force
T2 - Challenges of data indexing, classification, and the value of a comparative agenda
AU - Ostermann, Falk
AU - Böller, Florian
AU - Christiansen, Flemming Juul
AU - Coticchia, Fabrizio
AU - Fonck, Daan
AU - Herranz-Surrallés, Anna
AU - Kaarbo, Juliet
AU - KučMáš, Kryštof
AU - Onderco, Michal
AU - Pedersen, Rasmus B.
AU - Raunio, Tapio
AU - Reykers, Yf
AU - Smetana, Michal
AU - Vignoli, Valerio
AU - Wagner, Wolfgang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 selection and editorial matter, Delphine Deschaux-Dutard; individual chapters, the contributors.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Connecting to recent debate and the growing attention to the party politics of foreign policy, the chapter introduces the content and methodology of the Parliamentary Deployment Votes Database, which collects votes on military missions across a set of eleven countries in Europe and America. The chapter discusses the problems related to defining the scope of the database against divergent voting practices in national parliaments and disparate data availability, a.k.a. defining what matters in data collection and what not. It expounds how clustering into party families helps to structure collected data and theorize it, what to do with regional parties, and how to make further sense of data using voting-shares, cabinet level, and government-opposition variables. The chapter also shows how Hix et al.‘s Agreement Index, used in European Studies, can be handled to measure agreement and dissent on military missions.
AB - Connecting to recent debate and the growing attention to the party politics of foreign policy, the chapter introduces the content and methodology of the Parliamentary Deployment Votes Database, which collects votes on military missions across a set of eleven countries in Europe and America. The chapter discusses the problems related to defining the scope of the database against divergent voting practices in national parliaments and disparate data availability, a.k.a. defining what matters in data collection and what not. It expounds how clustering into party families helps to structure collected data and theorize it, what to do with regional parties, and how to make further sense of data using voting-shares, cabinet level, and government-opposition variables. The chapter also shows how Hix et al.‘s Agreement Index, used in European Studies, can be handled to measure agreement and dissent on military missions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85085379343&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4324/9780429198236-10
DO - 10.4324/9780429198236-10
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85085379343
SN - 9780429198236
SP - 170
EP - 188
BT - Research Methods in Defence Studies
PB - Taylor and Francis
ER -