This article applies recent advances in network analysis to highlight a central tension faced by policymakers – balancing the benefits of engaging with the international system and the associated domestic policy costs. International trade rewards certain domestic practices, such as respect for human rights. Enforcing such practices, however, is politically costly and sometimes prohibitive to state leaders who rely on political repression to stay in power. In such cases, domestic elites often resort to an alternative strategy of securing the benefits of international trade – setting up indirect trade channels through intermediary states. These competing incentives are modeled within a single framework using a formal network game in which sta...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 7, 2011).The entire ...
International disputes and tensions arise in situations where one nation is seeking its own economic...
Can governments still use trade to reward and punish partner countries? While WTO rules and the pre...
This article applies recent advances in network analysis to highlight a central tension faced by pol...
What are the implications and consequences of international interactions on domestic-level outcomes?...
Universally held basic human rights must remain separate from political rights. Such basic human rig...
A state has the authority to determine its human rights policy, and such power is part of a stat...
We augment the canonical neoclassical model of trade to allow for interstate disputes over land, oil...
Globalization has fostered increasing regional and global interdependence; a major facet of interdep...
This Article examines the overlooked countertrend of international trade regulation. It offers a the...
Whether human rights can be promoted and promulgated with persuasion or coercion has been much debat...
A growing number of preferential trade agreements (PTAs) have come to play a significant role in gov...
During its last complete business cycle, from 2001 to 2007, the United States experienced unsustaina...
Are states entitled to take unilateral or collective trade measures in cases of extraterritorial hum...
Previous research suggests that most treaties are ineffective in ensuring countries' compliance with...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 7, 2011).The entire ...
International disputes and tensions arise in situations where one nation is seeking its own economic...
Can governments still use trade to reward and punish partner countries? While WTO rules and the pre...
This article applies recent advances in network analysis to highlight a central tension faced by pol...
What are the implications and consequences of international interactions on domestic-level outcomes?...
Universally held basic human rights must remain separate from political rights. Such basic human rig...
A state has the authority to determine its human rights policy, and such power is part of a stat...
We augment the canonical neoclassical model of trade to allow for interstate disputes over land, oil...
Globalization has fostered increasing regional and global interdependence; a major facet of interdep...
This Article examines the overlooked countertrend of international trade regulation. It offers a the...
Whether human rights can be promoted and promulgated with persuasion or coercion has been much debat...
A growing number of preferential trade agreements (PTAs) have come to play a significant role in gov...
During its last complete business cycle, from 2001 to 2007, the United States experienced unsustaina...
Are states entitled to take unilateral or collective trade measures in cases of extraterritorial hum...
Previous research suggests that most treaties are ineffective in ensuring countries' compliance with...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 7, 2011).The entire ...
International disputes and tensions arise in situations where one nation is seeking its own economic...
Can governments still use trade to reward and punish partner countries? While WTO rules and the pre...