Recent literature argues that studies of economic sanction effectiveness suffer from a selection bias by considering only those sanctions that are deployed and not just threatened. These sanction threats, it is argued, should be more successful because both sender and target have an incentive to solve their dispute before entering into a costly economic sanction episode. Testing this assertion is somewhat problematic because sanction threats are, in essence, non-events— sanctions that were never deployed. This paper provides an empirical assessment of one set of threatened economic sanctions—the U.S. threats to revoke or condition China’s MFN status from 1989 to 1995. We show that Washington’s threats did not affect the level of Chinese pol...
This article describes political psychologies supporting United States (US) sanctions-related behavi...
While economic sanctions are widely believed to be ineffective policy instruments, their use has inc...
This study investigates what factors influence the effectiveness of economic sanctions in changing b...
There is a widespread perception that China’s international influence and assertiveness have grown s...
Economic sanctions are a primary tool the US government and international organizations use to promo...
China is perceived, on the one hand, as a long-term object of sanction pressure, on the other hand, ...
This report presents a history of U.S. economic sanctions imposed against the People's Republic of C...
Does economic coercion increase or decrease government respect for human rights in countries targete...
There is growing policy consensus in Washington and other Western capitals that economic sanctions a...
It is generally held that economic sanctions have an adverse effect on human rights in sanctioned co...
This study examines China and the United States’ sanctions vis-à-vis the Democratic People’s Republi...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed September 10, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p....
While intended as a nonviolent foreign policy alternative to military intervention, sanctions have o...
Sanctions are much easier to use against your allies than against your enemies. A friend will want t...
The adverse impact of economic sanctions on human rights is well documented in the literature (Pekse...
This article describes political psychologies supporting United States (US) sanctions-related behavi...
While economic sanctions are widely believed to be ineffective policy instruments, their use has inc...
This study investigates what factors influence the effectiveness of economic sanctions in changing b...
There is a widespread perception that China’s international influence and assertiveness have grown s...
Economic sanctions are a primary tool the US government and international organizations use to promo...
China is perceived, on the one hand, as a long-term object of sanction pressure, on the other hand, ...
This report presents a history of U.S. economic sanctions imposed against the People's Republic of C...
Does economic coercion increase or decrease government respect for human rights in countries targete...
There is growing policy consensus in Washington and other Western capitals that economic sanctions a...
It is generally held that economic sanctions have an adverse effect on human rights in sanctioned co...
This study examines China and the United States’ sanctions vis-à-vis the Democratic People’s Republi...
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed September 10, 2010)Includes bibliographical references (p....
While intended as a nonviolent foreign policy alternative to military intervention, sanctions have o...
Sanctions are much easier to use against your allies than against your enemies. A friend will want t...
The adverse impact of economic sanctions on human rights is well documented in the literature (Pekse...
This article describes political psychologies supporting United States (US) sanctions-related behavi...
While economic sanctions are widely believed to be ineffective policy instruments, their use has inc...
This study investigates what factors influence the effectiveness of economic sanctions in changing b...