<resource xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.1/metadata.xsd"><identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7910/DVN/QPIUHA</identifier><creators><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Rosa, Paolo</creatorName><givenName>Paolo</givenName><familyName>Rosa</familyName><nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID">0000-0002-9315-0846</nameIdentifier><affiliation>University of Trento</affiliation></creator><creator><creatorName nameType="Personal">Cuppuleri, Adriana</creatorName><givenName>Adriana</givenName><familyName>Cuppuleri</familyName></creator></creators><titles><title>Replication Data for: Dangerous dyads in the post-Soviet space: explaining Russia’s military escalation decisions, 1992–2010</title></titles><publisher>Harvard Dataverse</publisher><publicationYear>2021</publicationYear><subjects><subject>Social Sciences</subject><subject>Dyad analysis</subject><subject>Military behaviour</subject><subject>Neoclassical realism</subject><subject>Russia</subject></subjects><contributors><contributor contributorType="ContactPerson"><contributorName nameType="Personal">Rosa, Paolo</contributorName><givenName>Paolo</givenName><familyName>Rosa</familyName><affiliation>University of Trento</affiliation></contributor></contributors><dates><date dateType="Submitted">2020-12-03</date><date dateType="Updated">2021-01-20</date></dates><resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset"/><sizes><size>42784</size><size>63</size></sizes><formats><format>text/tab-separated-values</format><format>text/plain</format></formats><version>1.0</version><rightsList><rights rightsURI="info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess"/><rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0</rights></rightsList><descriptions><description descriptionType="Abstract">This paper analyses the military behaviour of Russia from 1992 to 2010. The method used is a combination of the dyad analysis introduced by Stuart Bremer in 1992 and the analysis of unit-level variables, which is distinctive of foreign policy analysis. We empirically test a set of hypotheses about the determinants of Russia’s military behaviour in the post-Cold War period by considering the impact of changes of international variables – relative power, the presence of military alliance pacts, the territorial salience of the dispute – and state-level variables – the degree of democracy/autocracy and regime vulnerability. A bivariate and a multivariate analysis are carried out to explain the separate and joint impacts of independent variables.</description></descriptions><geoLocations/></resource>