Results 301 to 310 of about 401,949 (347)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Economic Sanctions

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.
  +5 more sources

Economic Sanctions

2021
Abstract Chapter 3 covers U.S. government economic sanctions, which may be imposed upon entire countries (as embargoes), specified economic sectors, or individual state or nonstate actors. These comprise approximately thirty different programs that are governed principally by the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA ...
Eric L. Hirschhorn   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Secondary Economic Sanctions

Current Legal Problems, 2016
Many states, or rather their leaders and officials, routinely violate the fundamental human rights of both their compatriots or outsiders. Faced with this depressing catalogue of abuses, the international community'™s response of choice consists in imposing economic sanctions on wrongdoers.
openaire   +2 more sources

Rethinking Economic “Sanctions”

International Studies Review, 2016
What do democracies do by refusing to trade with dictatorships? The conventional view assumes that: (1) a democratic refusal to trade with dictators is an exception that requires special justification; (2) following customary international law, dictators should normally be recognized as legitimate in selling their peoples' resources; (3) a refusal to ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Economic sanctions

Journal of Peace Research, 2013
Economic sanctions have been referred to as a blunt instrument that the international community has often wielded without full consideration of the impact that these measures will have on the population of the targeted countries, particularly the weakest elements of society. Case studies of sanctions against Cuba, Iraq, and Yugoslavia have demonstrated
Susan Hannah Allen, David J Lektzian
openaire   +1 more source

Ending Economic Sanctions

Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2001
Little attention has been paid to how and when economic sanctions end, especially compared with the amount of research on their effectiveness. A game in which the ending of sanctions is part of interstate bargaining about a contested policy is analyzed.
Han Dorussen, Jongryn Mo
openaire   +1 more source

International business under sanctions

Journal of World Business, 2023
Klaus E Meyer, Andrei Panibratov
exaly  

The impact of international sanctions on environmental performance

Science of the Total Environment, 2020
Chun-Ping Chang
exaly  

The global sanctions data base

European Economic Review, 2020
Gabriel Felbermayr
exaly  

Economic Sanctions

Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1982
Derek Leebaert, Robin Renwick
openaire   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy