Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel

Recent scholarship has established that a majority of Americans will support the use of nuclear weapons and violate the principle of noncombatant immunity when American lives are on the line. Some scholars contend, however, that these hawkish American attitudes are an outlier and that other Western...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dill, J, Sagan, SD, Valentino, BA
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2022
_version_ 1826313378009710592
author Dill, J
Sagan, SD
Valentino, BA
author_facet Dill, J
Sagan, SD
Valentino, BA
author_sort Dill, J
collection OXFORD
description Recent scholarship has established that a majority of Americans will support the use of nuclear weapons and violate the principle of noncombatant immunity when American lives are on the line. Some scholars contend, however, that these hawkish American attitudes are an outlier and that other Western democratic publics have more fully internalized the nuclear taboo, as well as the prohibition on deliberately killing civilians. To investigate cross-national attitudes on these important norms, we conducted a survey experiment of American, British, French, and Israeli citizens. We find that American attitudes are not exceptional. Rather, Israeli respondents display the most hawkish preferences; French and American citizens are roughly equally hawkish; and the British public is consistently the least supportive of nuclear use or targeting civilians. Categorical prohibitions—against nuclear use and targeting civilians—do little to shape public opinion in these four countries. Instead, public opinion in each state follows the same consequentialist logic: a majority or near majority of respondents are willing to support using nuclear weapons when they are more effective than conventional options, but support declines when collateral civilian deaths rise. Respondents’ preferences for compatriots over foreign civilians and respondents’ retributiveness help explain individual-level variation in attitudes.
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:12:11Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:6f36eb2d-9deb-4081-8a4d-cd61e23eb32a
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:12:11Z
publishDate 2022
publisher Taylor and Francis
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6f36eb2d-9deb-4081-8a4d-cd61e23eb32a2024-06-26T15:46:23ZKettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and IsraelJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6f36eb2d-9deb-4081-8a4d-cd61e23eb32aEnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2022Dill, JSagan, SDValentino, BARecent scholarship has established that a majority of Americans will support the use of nuclear weapons and violate the principle of noncombatant immunity when American lives are on the line. Some scholars contend, however, that these hawkish American attitudes are an outlier and that other Western democratic publics have more fully internalized the nuclear taboo, as well as the prohibition on deliberately killing civilians. To investigate cross-national attitudes on these important norms, we conducted a survey experiment of American, British, French, and Israeli citizens. We find that American attitudes are not exceptional. Rather, Israeli respondents display the most hawkish preferences; French and American citizens are roughly equally hawkish; and the British public is consistently the least supportive of nuclear use or targeting civilians. Categorical prohibitions—against nuclear use and targeting civilians—do little to shape public opinion in these four countries. Instead, public opinion in each state follows the same consequentialist logic: a majority or near majority of respondents are willing to support using nuclear weapons when they are more effective than conventional options, but support declines when collateral civilian deaths rise. Respondents’ preferences for compatriots over foreign civilians and respondents’ retributiveness help explain individual-level variation in attitudes.
spellingShingle Dill, J
Sagan, SD
Valentino, BA
Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title_full Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title_fullStr Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title_full_unstemmed Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title_short Kettles of hawks: public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Israel
title_sort kettles of hawks public opinion on the nuclear taboo and noncombatant immunity in the united states united kingdom france and israel
work_keys_str_mv AT dillj kettlesofhawkspublicopiniononthenucleartabooandnoncombatantimmunityintheunitedstatesunitedkingdomfranceandisrael
AT sagansd kettlesofhawkspublicopiniononthenucleartabooandnoncombatantimmunityintheunitedstatesunitedkingdomfranceandisrael
AT valentinoba kettlesofhawkspublicopiniononthenucleartabooandnoncombatantimmunityintheunitedstatesunitedkingdomfranceandisrael