Coercive cooperation: explaining multilateral economic sanctions/ Lisa L. Martin
Material type: TextPublication details: New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1992Description: xiii, 299 p. : ill. ; 25 cmISBN: 9780691034768Subject(s): International cooperation | Economic sanctions | International economic relations | World politicsDDC classification: 337Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Books | Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section | 337 MAR/C (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P02008 |
Figures --
Tables --
Preface --
1 Introduction--
The Study of Economic Sanctions--
The Study of International--
Methodology--
Pt. 1 Theory and Data--
Model and Hypotheses--
A Model of Economic Sanctions--
Identifying Cooperation Problems--
What Explains Cooperation?--
Bandwagoning--
Conclusion--
3 Measuring Cooperation and Explanatory Variables--
Measurement and Description: The Dependent Variable--
Measurement and Description: Explanatory Variables--
Conclusion (starting p. 59) --
4 Estimating Models of Cooperation--
Regression Analysis--
Ordered-Probit Analysis--
Event-Count Analysis--
The Effect of Declining Hegemony--
Conclusion--
Pt. 2 Case Studies--
5 Human Rights in Latin America: Explaining Unilateral U.S. Sanctions--
Congress versus the President: U.S. Human-Rights Policy, 1973-76--
The Carter Administration--
Economic Sanctions and the Multilateral Development Banks--
Attitudes and Responses to U.S. Human-Rights Sanctions--
Pinochet's Chile: U.S. Leadership or Resistance?--
Conclusion (starting p. 128) --
6 The Falkland Islands Conflict--
The Falklands Crisis, 1982--
The Falklands and the European Community--
Sanctions and War: The Case of Ireland--
Responses of the United States, Latin America, and Others--
Conclusion--
7 Western Technology-Export Controls--
American, European, and Japanese Views on East-West Technology Transfer--
Institutional Coordination of Export Controls: CoCom--
Responding to the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan, 1980--
Responding to Dissident Trials, 1978--
Conclusion--
8 The Polish Crisis and Gas-Pipeline Sanctions--
Martial Law in Poland and the Siberian Gas Pipeline--
The Effect of Declining Hegemony--
Siberian Gas and European Preferences--
The Grain Embargo: Why It Mattered--
Conclusion--
9 Conclusion--
Explaining International Cooperation on Economic Sanctions--
Additional Findings--
Implications for Theories of International Cooperation and Economic Sanctions--
Notes--
Bibliography--
Index.
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