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Sanctions, Statecraft, and Nuclear Proliferation : Sanctions, Inducements, and Collective Action
by Edited by Etel SolingenEdition:
1st
ISBN13:
9780521281188
ISBN10:
0521281180
Format:
Paperback
Pub. Date:
4/30/2012
Publisher(s):
Cambridge University Press
List Price: $32.99
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Summary
Some states have violated international commitments not to develop nuclear weapons. Yet the effects of international sanctions or positive inducements on their internal politics remain highly contested. How have trade, aid, investments, diplomacy, financial measures and military threats affected different groups? How, when and why were those effects translated into compliance with non-proliferation rules? Have inducements been sufficiently biting, too harsh, too little, too late or just right for each case? How have different inducements influenced domestic cleavages? What were their unintended and unforeseen effects? Why are self-reliant autocracies more often the subject of sanctions? Leading scholars analyse the anatomy of inducements through novel conceptual perspectives, in-depth case studies, original quantitative data and newly translated documents. The volume distils ten key dilemmas of broad relevance to the study of statecraft, primarily from experiences with Iraq, Libya, Iran and North Korea, bound to spark debate among students and practitioners of international politics.
Table of Contents
| Anatomy of Inducements | |
| Introduction: the domestic distributional effects of sanctions and positive inducements | |
| Sanctions, inducements, and market power: political economy of international influence | |
| Empirical trends in sanctions and positive inducements in nonproliferation | |
| Competing Perspectives: The Range of Sanctions and Positive Inducements | |
| Positive incentives, positive results? Rethinking US counterproliferation policy | |
| An analytically eclectic approach to sanctions and nonproliferation | |
| Threats for peace? The domestic distributional effects of military threats | |
| Reassessing the Record: Focused Perspectives | |
| Influencing Iran's decisions on the nuclear program | |
| Engaging North Korea: the efficacy of sanctions and inducements | |
| Contrasting causal mechanisms: Iraq and Libya | |
| Conclusions: Understanding Causal Mechanisms and Policy Implications | |
| Ten dilemmas in nonproliferation statecraft | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
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