Michal Smetana

world politics | international security | political psychology

The lesser evil? Experimental evidence on the strength of nuclear and chemical weapon “taboos”


Journal article


Michal Smetana, Marek Vranka, Ondrej Rosendorf
Conflict Management and Peace Science, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Smetana, M., Vranka, M., & Rosendorf, O. (2022). The lesser evil? Experimental evidence on the strength of nuclear and chemical weapon “taboos.” Conflict Management and Peace Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Smetana, Michal, Marek Vranka, and Ondrej Rosendorf. “The Lesser Evil? Experimental Evidence on the Strength of Nuclear and Chemical Weapon ‘Taboos.’” Conflict Management and Peace Science (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Smetana, Michal, et al. “The Lesser Evil? Experimental Evidence on the Strength of Nuclear and Chemical Weapon ‘Taboos.’” Conflict Management and Peace Science, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{michal2022a,
  title = {The lesser evil? Experimental evidence on the strength of nuclear and chemical weapon “taboos”},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Conflict Management and Peace Science},
  author = {Smetana, Michal and Vranka, Marek and Rosendorf, Ondrej}
}

Abstract

We present findings of a survey experiment on a sample of 2350 American and British citizens, in which we examined attitudes towards nuclear and chemical strikes. Our findings demonstrate that even though the public accurately judges nuclear weapons as more destructive and indiscriminate, it is still more averse to the use of chemical than nuclear weapons. Our follow up study has shown that individuals are significantly more likely to associate chemical weapons with “rogue states” and terrorists, and associate nuclear weapons with modern powers. The findings contribute to scholarship on the “taboos” surrounding the (non-)use of WMDs in world politics.