In this article we address the long-debated question of when and why states comply with sanctions. While the literature remains indeterminate as to whether the key mechanisms driving sanction compliance are tied to interstate relations, intrastate constraints, or a dynamic combination of the two, our theoretical framework and methodological approach provide a novel perspective that incorporates insights drawn from network theory to explain the time until countries comply. Specifically, we argue that reciprocity, a concept with deep roots in both network theory and international relations, has largely been overlooked in the study of sanction compliance. Though often ignored, this concept captures an essential aspect of how cooperation is fos...
Can economic sanctions combat transnational terrorism effectively? Policymakers argue that sanctions...
When a country is sanctioned for violating international rules today, it is usually targeted by seve...
Sanctions are measures that one party (the sender) takes to influence the actions of another (the ta...
Some scholars have suggested that sanctions are doing more than meets the eye (Drezner 2003). Sancti...
A theory of sanction duration that focuses on differences between democratic and nondemocratic state...
Though reciprocity is an important aspect of coercive diplomacy, little is known about whether and w...
An economic sanction issued by a group of states can impose large costs on a target state and induce...
With the proliferation of sanctions after the end of the Cold War, the termination of these punitive...
Economic sanctions are long-lasting crises between states. Does the exchange of information between ...
This Article proposes a new approach to analyzing state compliance with international obligations, p...
Does shared membership in intergovernmental organizations pacify sanctioning behavior or facilitate ...
Although much research has examined how third parties might affect the success of economic sanctions...
This thesis attempts to establish a set of conditions under which explicit threats of economic sanct...
There is growing policy consensus in Washington and other Western capitals that economic sanctions a...
This article explores why governments commit to human rights enforcement by joining the Internationa...
Can economic sanctions combat transnational terrorism effectively? Policymakers argue that sanctions...
When a country is sanctioned for violating international rules today, it is usually targeted by seve...
Sanctions are measures that one party (the sender) takes to influence the actions of another (the ta...
Some scholars have suggested that sanctions are doing more than meets the eye (Drezner 2003). Sancti...
A theory of sanction duration that focuses on differences between democratic and nondemocratic state...
Though reciprocity is an important aspect of coercive diplomacy, little is known about whether and w...
An economic sanction issued by a group of states can impose large costs on a target state and induce...
With the proliferation of sanctions after the end of the Cold War, the termination of these punitive...
Economic sanctions are long-lasting crises between states. Does the exchange of information between ...
This Article proposes a new approach to analyzing state compliance with international obligations, p...
Does shared membership in intergovernmental organizations pacify sanctioning behavior or facilitate ...
Although much research has examined how third parties might affect the success of economic sanctions...
This thesis attempts to establish a set of conditions under which explicit threats of economic sanct...
There is growing policy consensus in Washington and other Western capitals that economic sanctions a...
This article explores why governments commit to human rights enforcement by joining the Internationa...
Can economic sanctions combat transnational terrorism effectively? Policymakers argue that sanctions...
When a country is sanctioned for violating international rules today, it is usually targeted by seve...
Sanctions are measures that one party (the sender) takes to influence the actions of another (the ta...