Results 291 to 300 of about 4,730,247 (332)
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The Effects of Economic Sanctions on Foreign Asset Expropriation
Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2022Studies suggest that home countries impose economic sanctions following host state expropriation of home firms. However, and not addressed in the empirical literature, is the possibility that sanctions lead targeted countries to nationalize firms from ...
Hoon Lee, David Lektzian, G. Biglaiser
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Economic Sanctions: Stylized Facts and Quantitative Evidence
Annual Review of EconomicsThe remarkable increase in the use of economic sanctions as a coercive tool of foreign policy over the past quarter century has been accompanied by an equally rapid growth in the number of academic and policy studies.
Gabriel Felbermayr +3 more
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International Studies Quarterly, 2022
Previous research shows that economic sanctions affect three facets of public opinion in target states: support for the policy at issue, support for the target government, and hostility toward the sanctioner.
Rena Sung, Jonghyuk Park
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Previous research shows that economic sanctions affect three facets of public opinion in target states: support for the policy at issue, support for the target government, and hostility toward the sanctioner.
Rena Sung, Jonghyuk Park
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2018
This chapter considers the case for economic sanctions, both targeted and comprehensive. It challenges the prevailing view on the morality of economic sanctions, which holds that sanctions (including to some degree targeted sanctions) are highly objectionable. To do so, it considers and replies to four central objections to economic sanctions.
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This chapter considers the case for economic sanctions, both targeted and comprehensive. It challenges the prevailing view on the morality of economic sanctions, which holds that sanctions (including to some degree targeted sanctions) are highly objectionable. To do so, it considers and replies to four central objections to economic sanctions.
+5 more sources
A theory of economic sanctions as terms-of-trade manipulation
Journal of International EconomicsHow can a country design economic sanctions to maximize their economic cost to the sanctioned country at the lowest cost to the sanctioner? I consider this problem from the perspective of international trade and draw a close connection between trade ...
John Sturm Becko
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Environmental science and pollution research international, 2021
H. Le, D. Hoang
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H. Le, D. Hoang
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The economic effects of international sanctions: An event study
Journal of Comparative Economics, 2023Jerg Gutmann +2 more
exaly
International Economic Sanctions and Third-Country Effects
IMF Economic ReviewFabio Ghironi, Daisoon Kim, G. K. Ozhan
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