We develop and test a general argument about the conditions under which state leaders are most likely to choose legal dispute resolution over bilateral negotiations as a means to settle international disputes. Our central claim is that leaders who anticipate significant domestic audience costs for the making of voluntary, negotiated concessions are likely to seek the “political cover” of an international legal ruling. In such cases, it will be easier for leaders to justify the making of concessions if they are mandated as part of a ruling by an international court or arbitration body. We test a series of domestic-level hypotheses using a dataset comprised of nearly 1,500 rounds of talks concerning disputed territorial claims. Our multivaria...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
When states enter into an agreement the credibility of their commitment is undermined by the weaknes...
The existing international relations literature is characterized by two perspectives on dispute sett...
Territorial disputes are a common source of armed conflict and war, yet, during the twentieth centur...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
This paper focuses on how domestic legal systems influence states ’ choices of peaceful dispute reso...
This paper focuses on how domestic legal systems influence states ’ choices of peaceful dispute reso...
How does variation in the strength of a court’s jurisdiction and enforcement affect strategic behavi...
This article addresses one prominent expression of the interplay between politics and law in interna...
This article addresses one prominent expression of the interplay between politics and law in interna...
Third-party conflict management, particularly legal dispute resolution (arbitration and adjudica-tio...
The central premise of this volume is that the relationship of law and politics in international law...
Arbitration and adjudication have proven to be effective means of producing long-lasting settlements...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
When states enter into an agreement the credibility of their commitment is undermined by the weaknes...
The existing international relations literature is characterized by two perspectives on dispute sett...
Territorial disputes are a common source of armed conflict and war, yet, during the twentieth centur...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
Why should governments delegate decision-making authority over territorial issues to an internationa...
This paper focuses on how domestic legal systems influence states ’ choices of peaceful dispute reso...
This paper focuses on how domestic legal systems influence states ’ choices of peaceful dispute reso...
How does variation in the strength of a court’s jurisdiction and enforcement affect strategic behavi...
This article addresses one prominent expression of the interplay between politics and law in interna...
This article addresses one prominent expression of the interplay between politics and law in interna...
Third-party conflict management, particularly legal dispute resolution (arbitration and adjudica-tio...
The central premise of this volume is that the relationship of law and politics in international law...
Arbitration and adjudication have proven to be effective means of producing long-lasting settlements...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
When states enter into an agreement the credibility of their commitment is undermined by the weaknes...
The existing international relations literature is characterized by two perspectives on dispute sett...