Foreign aid is usually seen as a form of international cooperation. Thus, the expectation is that states engaged in international rivalry with one another should be unlikely to provide each other aid. However, they do provide their enemies aid. We consider how situations of uncertainty influence aid transfers between states. We argue that states may provide each other aid to limit uncertainty from potential regime changes that could lead to war. Such uncertainty is particularly bad for rivals who are prone to militarized conflict. We find that rivals may provide one another foreign aid when one of the countries is experiencing regime-threatening levels of domestic instability. We compare these results to the behavior of nonrivals and find t...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
A common strategy pursued by states targeted by international terrorism is to provide economic and m...
Many international organizations reduce the costs states incur from conflict. Critics argue that the...
Previous research has not specified the circumstances under which foreign aid may increase the proba...
Do bilateral donors, whether for strategic or altruistic reasons, single out countries in or near a ...
This paper considers the impact of foreign aid on the risk of civil conflict. Previous studies on th...
Aid flows continue to be volatile and unpredictable, even though it is widely accepted that this ero...
The analysis of official development assistance has always struggled with the contradiction between ...
Paper Presented - International Association for Political Science Students World Congress 2016Foreig...
This paper studies the effects of bilateral foreign aid on conflict escalation and deescalation. Fir...
Recent studies and reports suggest that foreign aid/intervention has been somewhat futile in eradica...
This paper develops a game-theoretic model of public policy in a developing country in order to expl...
This paper considers the impact of foreign aid flows on the risk of civil conflict. We improve on ea...
A common strategy pursued by states targeted by international terrorism is to provide economic and m...
Donor countries have a poor track record of meeting their foreign aid commitments. Yet the discrepan...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
A common strategy pursued by states targeted by international terrorism is to provide economic and m...
Many international organizations reduce the costs states incur from conflict. Critics argue that the...
Previous research has not specified the circumstances under which foreign aid may increase the proba...
Do bilateral donors, whether for strategic or altruistic reasons, single out countries in or near a ...
This paper considers the impact of foreign aid on the risk of civil conflict. Previous studies on th...
Aid flows continue to be volatile and unpredictable, even though it is widely accepted that this ero...
The analysis of official development assistance has always struggled with the contradiction between ...
Paper Presented - International Association for Political Science Students World Congress 2016Foreig...
This paper studies the effects of bilateral foreign aid on conflict escalation and deescalation. Fir...
Recent studies and reports suggest that foreign aid/intervention has been somewhat futile in eradica...
This paper develops a game-theoretic model of public policy in a developing country in order to expl...
This paper considers the impact of foreign aid flows on the risk of civil conflict. We improve on ea...
A common strategy pursued by states targeted by international terrorism is to provide economic and m...
Donor countries have a poor track record of meeting their foreign aid commitments. Yet the discrepan...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
A common strategy pursued by states targeted by international terrorism is to provide economic and m...
Many international organizations reduce the costs states incur from conflict. Critics argue that the...