How do economic sanctions affect presidential approval? Competing claims have been made about the domestic political consequences of economic sanctions. One claim is that sanctions are unpopular because they have negative economic consequences; another claim is that sanctions are popular because they project an image of strength; and another claim is that sanctions are neither popular nor unpopular because the public is uninformed about international affairs. These arguments imply competing identification restrictions. I test these competing models using a Bayesian Structural Vector Autoregression (B-SVAR) model. The results show that sanctions have a moderate negative effect on presidential approval. I use these findings as a basis for a b...
Are economic sanctions costly for the sanctioning state? Some scholars argue that sanctions are cost...
How do sanctions affect incumbent electoral performance during elections? Although existing literatu...
Are economic sanctions effective instruments of American foreign policy? The consensus view among sc...
Sanctions are presumed to work on the logic of a cost/benefit analysis, where the actors make conces...
Why do we observe economic sanctions despite strong doubts regarding their effectiveness? While the ...
While a great deal of attention has been to paid to whether or not economic sanctions work, less ene...
We develop and test a theory, based on the Stolper–Samuelson Theorem, of the effectiveness of sancti...
What are the determinants of public support for the government’s foreign policy? We shed light on t...
Despite the low success rate indicated by scholarly assessments, economic sanctions remain a commonl...
The economic theory on economic sanctions gives strong indications that success depends positively o...
There is some consensus in the literature that economic sanctions targeting authoritarian regimes ar...
Most analysts argue that economic sanctions are a relatively poor policy tool. In this article I bui...
While economic sanctions are widely believed to be ineffective policy instruments, their use has inc...
Our study joins recent scholarship that examines the political impact of economic sanctions on targe...
Economic sanctions are a nuanced form of statecraft that have grown increasingly popular over the la...
Are economic sanctions costly for the sanctioning state? Some scholars argue that sanctions are cost...
How do sanctions affect incumbent electoral performance during elections? Although existing literatu...
Are economic sanctions effective instruments of American foreign policy? The consensus view among sc...
Sanctions are presumed to work on the logic of a cost/benefit analysis, where the actors make conces...
Why do we observe economic sanctions despite strong doubts regarding their effectiveness? While the ...
While a great deal of attention has been to paid to whether or not economic sanctions work, less ene...
We develop and test a theory, based on the Stolper–Samuelson Theorem, of the effectiveness of sancti...
What are the determinants of public support for the government’s foreign policy? We shed light on t...
Despite the low success rate indicated by scholarly assessments, economic sanctions remain a commonl...
The economic theory on economic sanctions gives strong indications that success depends positively o...
There is some consensus in the literature that economic sanctions targeting authoritarian regimes ar...
Most analysts argue that economic sanctions are a relatively poor policy tool. In this article I bui...
While economic sanctions are widely believed to be ineffective policy instruments, their use has inc...
Our study joins recent scholarship that examines the political impact of economic sanctions on targe...
Economic sanctions are a nuanced form of statecraft that have grown increasingly popular over the la...
Are economic sanctions costly for the sanctioning state? Some scholars argue that sanctions are cost...
How do sanctions affect incumbent electoral performance during elections? Although existing literatu...
Are economic sanctions effective instruments of American foreign policy? The consensus view among sc...