Under what conditions are foreign aid donors willing to suspend foreign aid to punish political transgressions, such as election fraud, corruption scandals or political repression? Prior scholarship has emphasized that political sanctions, including foreign aid suspensions, are constrained by the geostrategic considerations of donor countries. However, foreign aid suspensions often occur in strategically important countries, and donors respond differently to different types of political transgressions within the same county. To shed light on this puzzle, in this article, I present evidence from an original survey of top-level donor representatives in 20 African countries, including a list experiment designed to elicit truthful responses abo...
Foreign aid scholars argue that donors outsource development assistance to non-governmental organiza...
How do elections influence foreign aid spending? This is the primary question I seek to answer in th...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
Contains fulltext : 176122.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Under what cond...
This article provides theoretical and empirical solutions to two connected puzzles in the study of f...
This study tests two opposing hypotheses about the impact of aid fragmentation on the practice of ai...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Replication data for "Rewarding Human Rights? Selective Aid Sanctions against Repressive States", fo...
Does being named and shamed for human rights abuse influence the amount of foreign aid received by t...
Does corruption reduce support for foreign aid? General explanations for aid fatigue, such as meagre...
In this paper, we focus on the determinants of the relationship between aid and corruption. We propo...
Researchers from Hans Morgenthau and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita have suggested that donor countries vie...
Does being named and shamed for human rights abuse influence the amount of foreign aid received by t...
Foreign aid scholars argue that donors outsource development assistance to non-governmental organiza...
Foreign aid scholars argue that donors outsource development assistance to non-governmental organiza...
How do elections influence foreign aid spending? This is the primary question I seek to answer in th...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
Contains fulltext : 176122.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Under what cond...
This article provides theoretical and empirical solutions to two connected puzzles in the study of f...
This study tests two opposing hypotheses about the impact of aid fragmentation on the practice of ai...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Replication data for "Rewarding Human Rights? Selective Aid Sanctions against Repressive States", fo...
Does being named and shamed for human rights abuse influence the amount of foreign aid received by t...
Does corruption reduce support for foreign aid? General explanations for aid fatigue, such as meagre...
In this paper, we focus on the determinants of the relationship between aid and corruption. We propo...
Researchers from Hans Morgenthau and Bruce Bueno de Mesquita have suggested that donor countries vie...
Does being named and shamed for human rights abuse influence the amount of foreign aid received by t...
Foreign aid scholars argue that donors outsource development assistance to non-governmental organiza...
Foreign aid scholars argue that donors outsource development assistance to non-governmental organiza...
How do elections influence foreign aid spending? This is the primary question I seek to answer in th...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...