A Theory of Economic Sanctions and Issue Linkage: The Roles of Preferences, Information, and Threats

A realistic theory of economic sanctions should be built on the facts that sanctions are a game of issue linkage involving two or more issues, players may not know each other's preferences for the outcome of the game, and threatening sanctions may be as important as imposing sanctions as a stra...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of politics 2004-02, Vol.66 (1), p.25-42
Hauptverfasser: Lacy, Dean, Niou, Emerson M. S.
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description A realistic theory of economic sanctions should be built on the facts that sanctions are a game of issue linkage involving two or more issues, players may not know each other's preferences for the outcome of the game, and threatening sanctions may be as important as imposing sanctions as a strategy in international disputes. The threat and use of economic sanctions are modeled as a multistage game of two-sided incomplete information between a target and a coercer. The threat stage is critically important for understanding the outcome of sanctions, and current empirical studies suffer from a case selection bias. Economic sanctions are likely to be imposed when they are not likely to succeed in changing the target's behavior. Sanctions that are likely to succeed will do so at the mere threat of sanctions. Despite the unlikely success of sanctions, coercers must sometimes impose sanctions, even after the threat of sanctions has failed to change the target's behavior.
doi_str_mv 10.1046/j.1468-2508.2004.00140.x
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete
subjects Coercion
Compliance costs
Economic costs
Economic models
Economic sanctions
Economics
Game Theory
Human rights
International sanctions
Most favored nation
Nash equilibrium
Political theory
Preferences
Sanctions
Threat
Trade sanctions
title A Theory of Economic Sanctions and Issue Linkage: The Roles of Preferences, Information, and Threats
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