Lupton skillfully achieves her goals and much more, making a compelling case that reputations matter a great deal for leaders navigating the domain of international relations. Students, scholars, and policy makers should greatly profit from a thoughtful reading of this work.
Choice
This is an important book that is a welcome addition to the ongoing research on reputation and foreign policy, while also having important policy implications. In addition to its novel theoretical contribution, Lupton's study is also valuable in demonstrating the validity of a multimethod approach through her well-crafted qualitative and experimental research design. As such, Reputation for Resolve should have a strong appeal to diverse audiences, ranging from scholars and students of international politics to the broader policy community.
Perspectives on Politics
Lupton's work is especially innovative for combining a micro-foundational perspective on her research question, through process tracing survey experiments that manipulate key features of both context and leader behavior, with case studies that probe how Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev evaluated two US presidents?Dwight Eisenhower and Kennedy?through a reputational lens.
World Politics
Reputation of Resolve is sure to become essential reading for scholars of reputation, signaling, and credibility
Brian Blankenship, University of Miami
Reputation for Resolve is essential reading for international relations scholars who are interested in reputation, leaders, and crisis diplomacy. Lupton crafts an elegant and intuitive theory while ably addressing both the reputation supporters and skeptics upon whose work she builds. She also brings nuance to bear on her argument, deftly integrating additional factors like situational assessments and power/capabilities
Kathleen Powers, Dartmouth University
Lupton brings clarity to the ongoing debate about reputations and their effects in international security. Most importantly, her innovative focus on leader-specific reputations shows that both leaders and states can have reputations for resolve (or for irresolute action), and that these reputations interact in interesting ways.
Jennifer Spindel, University of New Hampshire
Danielle Lupton's Reputation for Resolve makes a very welcome contribution to what has become an exciting new wave of research on reputation in international politics. [I]t does so with clarity, a wealth of empirical evidence, top-notch writing, and masterful organization.Reputation of Resolve is sure to become essential reading for scholars of reputation, signaling, and credibility.
H-Diplo, Biran Blankenship
Reputation for Resolve combines rigorous experiments with qualitative case studies, a multi-method approach that addresses both internal and external validity.[It]i s essential reading for international relations scholars who are interested in reputation, leaders, and crisis diplomacy.
H-Dilpo, Kathleen Powers
Lupton brings clarity to the ongoing debate about reputations and their effects in international security. This should be a boon both for scholars looking to use Amazon's MTurk platform for survey research in international relations, and to scholars who are interested in studying how perceptions form and change over time.
H-Dilpo, Jennifer Spindel