articleJournal of Conflict ResolutionAug 17, 2015Closed access

Estimating Dynamic State Preferences from United Nations Voting Data

Georgetown University · Harvard University · +1 more institution

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Abstract

United Nations (UN) General Assembly votes have become the standard data source for measures of states preferences over foreign policy. Most papers use dyadic indicators of voting similarity between states. We propose a dynamic ordinal spatial model to estimate state ideal points from 1946 to 2012 on a single dimension that reflects state positions toward the US-led liberal order. We use information about the content of the UN’s agenda to make estimates comparable across time. Compared to existing measures, our estimates better separate signal from noise in identifying foreign policy shifts, have greater face validity, allow for better intertemporal comparisons, are less sensitive to shifts in the UN’ agenda,…

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1,042
total citations
FWCI
158.10
Percentile
100%
References
59
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Voting
  • Dimension (graph theory)
  • Foreign policy
  • Preference
  • Liberalism
  • Political science
  • Ideal point
  • Similarity (geometry)
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