We acknowledge the contribution of von Stein (2005) in calling attention to the very real problem of selection bias in estimating treaty effects. Nonetheless, we dispute both von Stein’s theoretical and empirical conclusions. Theoretically, we contend that treaties can both screen and constrain simultaneously, meaning that findings of screening do nothing to undermine the claim that treaties constrain state behavior as well. Empirically, we question von Stein’s estimator on several grounds, including its strong distributional assumptions and its statistical inconsistency. We then illustrate that selection bias does not account for much of the difference between Simmons’s (2000) and von Stein’s (2005) estimated treaty effects, and instead re...
Evidence suggests that leaders of democratic states experience high costs from violating past commit...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
Treaties represent an important policy mechanism in U.S. foreign policy. There are good reasons to e...
We acknowledge the contribution of von Stein (2005) in calling attention to the very real problem of...
The effects of international institutions on state behavior make up a key research agenda in interna...
The question of whether treaties matter has long resisted an empirical verdict. A pattern of compli...
Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights t...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
We use a replication experiment of 94 specifications from 16 different studies to show the severity ...
How and when do commitments to international institutions affect the behavior of national government...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
Understanding the conditions under which state leaders are willing to honor alliance commitments in ...
A major question in investment treaty arbitration is whether it is biased against developing countri...
Governing elites often ratify human rights treaties, even when their policies do not align with thos...
Evidence suggests that leaders of democratic states experience high costs from violating past commit...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
Treaties represent an important policy mechanism in U.S. foreign policy. There are good reasons to e...
We acknowledge the contribution of von Stein (2005) in calling attention to the very real problem of...
The effects of international institutions on state behavior make up a key research agenda in interna...
The question of whether treaties matter has long resisted an empirical verdict. A pattern of compli...
Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights t...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
We use a replication experiment of 94 specifications from 16 different studies to show the severity ...
How and when do commitments to international institutions affect the behavior of national government...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
Understanding the conditions under which state leaders are willing to honor alliance commitments in ...
A major question in investment treaty arbitration is whether it is biased against developing countri...
Governing elites often ratify human rights treaties, even when their policies do not align with thos...
Evidence suggests that leaders of democratic states experience high costs from violating past commit...
Theories of alliance formation and war suggest that alliances influence the probability that a poten...
Treaties represent an important policy mechanism in U.S. foreign policy. There are good reasons to e...