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The Challenge of Targeting Economic Sanctions
International Journal: Canada's Journal of Global Policy Analysis, 2002Smart Sanctions: Targeting Economic Statecraft,, edited by David Cortright and George A. Lopez (Lanham MD: Rowan & Littlefield, 2002, xvi, 259pp, US$72.00 cloth, ISBN 0-7425-0142-6, US$27.95, ISBN 0-7425-0143-4)Sanctions and the Search for Security: Challenges to UN Action, by David Cortright and George A.
Norrin M. Ripsman +4 more
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Sanctioned to Starve? The Impact of Economic Sanctions on Food Security in Targeted States
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2020Economic sanctions are imposed by senders to create the maximum economic damage in order to coerce the target to change its objectionable policy, however its impact may have varying and unintended consequences for targets. One of such possible consequences could be sanctions exacerbating the state of food insecurity in targeted states. In this chapter,
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Coercive Diplomacy and Economic Sanctions Reciprocity: Explaining Targets’ Counter-Sanctions
Defence and Peace Economics, 2021Though reciprocity is an important aspect of coercive diplomacy, little is known about whether and when sanctioned countries (i.e., targets) respond to foreign pressure with their own counter-sanct...
Dursun Peksen, Jin Mun Jeong
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2016
International sanctions have become the instrument of choice for policymakers dealing with a variety of different challenges to international peace and security. This is the first comprehensive and systematic analysis of all the targeted sanctions regimes imposed by the United Nations since the end of the Cold War.
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International sanctions have become the instrument of choice for policymakers dealing with a variety of different challenges to international peace and security. This is the first comprehensive and systematic analysis of all the targeted sanctions regimes imposed by the United Nations since the end of the Cold War.
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Sharing Responsibility for UN Targeted Sanctions
International Organizations Law Review, 2015International organizations often lack operational capacity, but may command significant normative power over States. By contrast, States have organs with significant operational capacity. Adoption of sanctions by the un Security Council under Chapter vii of the un Charter would remain a dead letter without enlisting the capacity of States to implement
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Targeted Sanctions as a Pathway to Accountability
Journal of International Criminal JusticeAbstract The growth of ‘Magnitsky-style’ targeted sanctions has ushered in a new chapter in the history of sanctions practice that places civil society actors in an increasingly empowered position. The development of new legal and policy frameworks in several jurisdictions, led by the USA, has formalized an active role for civil society ...
Tomas Hamilton +4 more
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JAMA, 1989
Academic sanction, the intentional denial of scholarly exchange for political reasons, presents grave practical and moral problems to the open pursuit of medical science. The focus of this article targets South African science. However, examples of academic sanction in Western Europe, the United States, the Soviet Union, China, Japan, and other areas ...
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Academic sanction, the intentional denial of scholarly exchange for political reasons, presents grave practical and moral problems to the open pursuit of medical science. The focus of this article targets South African science. However, examples of academic sanction in Western Europe, the United States, the Soviet Union, China, Japan, and other areas ...
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Blacklisting and the ban: Contesting targeted sanctions in Europe
Security Dialogue, 2011Abstract This article examines the practice of targeted sanctions as they are deployed against individuals and groups suspected of financing and facilitating terrorism in Europe. Substantial academic attention and critique has surrounded targeted sanctions and blacklists, as these practices challenge existing logics of evidence ...
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The Effect of Sanction Target on Managers’ Compliance with Regulations
Behavioral Research in AccountingABSTRACT Regulators use sanctions to deter managers of organizations from harmful conduct. Regulatory sanctions sometimes target individual violating managers but sometimes target entire violating organizations. We use an economic experiment to study the effect of targeting individuals versus entire organizations on managers’ compliance ...
Kun Huo, Matthew Sooy, Sara Wick
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