Multilateral treaties' success depends in large part on decisions made during their drafting and negotiations. Lack of support from key states, weak or non-binding commitments, and sweeping reservations often doom treaties to ineffectiveness or worse. Challenges to treaty effectiveness have inspired significant bodies of research in international law and relations. Yet existing research in these fields has given little systematic attention to negotiations or to the political origins of treaties generally. This dissertation aims to improve our understanding of treaty-making through both theory development and empirical analysis. I first develop a positive decision-theoretical model of the factors that states consider in drafting, negotiati...
In the fall of 2007, Senate hearings finally commenced on the United Nations Convention on the Law o...
All treaties formalize promises made by national parties. Yet there is a fundamental difference betw...
“[A] cause seldom triumphs unless somebody’s personal interest is bound up with it.” In the past few...
Multilateral treaties' success depends in large part on decisions made during their drafting and neg...
When do states successfully form international agreements, and how are they designed? This dissertat...
States spend years and tremendous diplomatic capital negotiating treaties. Yet, despite the best eff...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022What leads states to exit from treaties? Is treaty exi...
Prepared for presentation at the 2006 Shambaugh Conference, “Building Synergies: Institutions and Co...
Who supports multilateral treaties and who doesn’t? We offer a systematic account of treaty ratifica...
Treaties are the primary source of international law. But little is known about which countries ente...
This project considers the pace of change in international law, focusing on sources of evolution and...
Rational choice theory is the dominant paradigm through which scholars of international law and inte...
The post-Cold War era saw explosive growth in international organizations and interstate cooperation...
Abstract: What determines preferences for cooperation through international legal agreements? Why do...
In the fall of 2007, Senate hearings finally commenced on the United Nations Convention on the Law o...
All treaties formalize promises made by national parties. Yet there is a fundamental difference betw...
“[A] cause seldom triumphs unless somebody’s personal interest is bound up with it.” In the past few...
Multilateral treaties' success depends in large part on decisions made during their drafting and neg...
When do states successfully form international agreements, and how are they designed? This dissertat...
States spend years and tremendous diplomatic capital negotiating treaties. Yet, despite the best eff...
Over 50,000 international treaties are in force today, covering nearly every aspect of international...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022What leads states to exit from treaties? Is treaty exi...
Prepared for presentation at the 2006 Shambaugh Conference, “Building Synergies: Institutions and Co...
Who supports multilateral treaties and who doesn’t? We offer a systematic account of treaty ratifica...
Treaties are the primary source of international law. But little is known about which countries ente...
This project considers the pace of change in international law, focusing on sources of evolution and...
Rational choice theory is the dominant paradigm through which scholars of international law and inte...
The post-Cold War era saw explosive growth in international organizations and interstate cooperation...
Abstract: What determines preferences for cooperation through international legal agreements? Why do...
In the fall of 2007, Senate hearings finally commenced on the United Nations Convention on the Law o...
All treaties formalize promises made by national parties. Yet there is a fundamental difference betw...
“[A] cause seldom triumphs unless somebody’s personal interest is bound up with it.” In the past few...