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Library,
Finnish
Institute of International Affairs
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Helsinki,
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FIIA Library weekly article lists
11.-15.8.2014: A-category journal
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International organization
Cloward, Karisa
False commitments: local
misrepresentation and the
international norms against female
genital mutilation and early
marriage
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 495-526
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "A substantial
international relations literature
addresses the various ways in which
international actors, and the norms
they promote, influence state
behavior. But less attention has
been paid to the influence these
actors directly exert at the local
level, despite the fact that many
transnational campaigns promote
norms for which individuals - not
states - are the primary
transgressors. If individuals behave
as some states do, publicly
embracing international norms only
because they expect a financial or
reputational benefit from doing so,
then the campaigns have not fully
succeeded. But when do individuals
engage in real behavior change, and
when do they simply change the
public image they present to the
international community? To begin to
address this question, I employ a
randomized field experiment to
evaluate individuals' willingness to
make claims that differ from their
true normative commitments. I
conducted the experiment in the
context of an original 2008 opinion
survey about female genital
mutilation and early marriage, run
in rural Kenya. I find that
respondents misrepresent their
behavior and intentions, and I
supplement these findings with an
exploration of causal mechanisms
through qualitative interviews."
International organization
Horowitz, Michael C. & Stam,
Allan C.
How prior military experience
influences the future militarized
behavior of leaders
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 527-559
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "Policy-makers
and the electorate assume political
executives' life experiences affect
their policy choices once in office.
Recent international relations work
on leaders focuses almost entirely
on how political institutions shape
leaders' choices rather than on
leaders' personal attributes and how
they influence policy choices. This
article focuses the analytic lens on
leaders and their personal
backgrounds. We theorize that the
prior military background of a
leader is an important life
experience with direct relevance for
how leaders evaluate the utility of
using military force. We test
several propositions employing a new
data set, building on Archigos, that
encompasses the life background
characteristics of more than 2500
heads of state from 1875 to 2004.
The results show that the leaders
most likely to initiate militarized
disputes and wars are those with
prior military service but no combat
experience, as well as former
rebels."
International organization
Gunitsky, Seva
From shocks to waves: hegemonic
transitions and democratization in
the twentieth century
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 561-597
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "What causes
democratic waves? This article puts
forward a theory of institutional
waves that focuses on the effects of
systemic transformations. It argues
that abrupt shifts in the
distribution of power among leading
states create unique and powerful
incentives for sweeping domestic
reforms. A variety of statistical
tests reveals strong support for the
idea that shifts in hegemonic power
have shaped waves of democracy,
fascism, and communism in the
twentieth century, independent of
domestic factors or horizontal
diffusion. These 'hegemonic shocks'
produce windows of opportunity for
external regime imposition, enable
rising powers to rapidly expand
networks of trade and patronage, and
inspire imitators by credibly
revealing hidden information about
relative regime effectiveness to
foreign audiences. I outline these
mechanisms of coercion, influence,
and emulation that connect shocks to
waves, empirically test their
relationship, and illustrate the
theory with two case studies - the
wave of democratic transitions after
World War I, and the fascist wave of
the late interwar period. In sum,
democracy in the twentieth century
cannot be fully understood without
examining the effects of hegemonic
shocks."
International organization
Colgan, Jeff D.
The emperor has no clothes: the
limits of OPEC in the global oil
market
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 599-632
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "Scholars have
long debated the causal impact of
international institutions such as
the World Trade Organization or the
International Monetary Fund. This
study investigates Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC), an organization that
purports to have significant
influence over the market for the
world's most important commodity -
petroleum. Using four empirical
tests, I find that OPEC has little
or no impact on its members'
production levels. These findings
prompt the question of why so many
people, including scholars, believe
in OPEC's influence over the world's
oil supply. The idea of OPEC as a
cartel is a 'rational myth' that
supports the organization's true
principal function, which is to
generate political benefits for its
members. One benefit it generates is
international prestige. I test this
idea using data on diplomatic
representation and find that OPEC
membership is associated with
increased international recognition
by other states. Overall, these
findings help one to better
understand international regimes and
the process of ideational change in
world politics."
International organization
Salehyan, Idean & Siroky,
David & Wood, Reed M.
External rebel sponsorship and
civilian abuse: a principal-agent
analysis of wartime atrocities
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 633-661
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "Although some
rebel groups work hard to foster
collaborative ties with civilians,
others engage in egregious abuses
and war crimes. We argue that
foreign state funding for rebel
organizations greatly reduces
incentives to 'win the hearts and
minds' of civilians because it
diminishes the need to collect
resources from the population.
However, unlike other lucrative
resources, foreign funding of rebel
groups must be understood in
principal-agent terms. Some external
principals - namely, democracies and
states with strong human rights
lobbies - are more concerned with
atrocities in the conflict zone than
others. Multiple state principals
also lead to abuse because no single
state can effectively restrain the
organization. We test these
conjectures with new data on foreign
support for rebel groups and data on
one- sided violence against
civilians. Most notably, we find
strong evidence that principal
characteristics help influence agent
actions."
International organization
Johns, Leslie & Pelc,
Krzysztof J.
Who gets to be in the room? :
manipulating participation in WTO
disputes
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 663-699
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "Third parties
complicate World Trade Organization
(WTO) dispute settlement by adding
voices and issues to a dispute.
However, complainants can limit
third parties by filing cases under
Article XXIII of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), rather than Article XXII. We
argue that third parties create
'insurance' by lowering the benefit
of winning and the cost of losing a
dispute. We construct a formal model
in which third parties make
settlement less likely. The weaker
the complainant's case, the more
likely the complainant is to promote
third party participation and to
settle. Article XXII cases are
therefore more likely to settle,
controlling for the realized number
of third parties, and a complainant
who files under Article XXIII is
more likely to win a ruling and less
likely to see that ruling appealed
by the defendant. We provide
empirical support using WTO disputes
from 1995 to 2011."
International organization
Rickard, Stephanie J. &
Caraway, Teri L.
International negotiations in the
shadow of national elections
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 701-720
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "This study
examines the role elections play in
negotiations between states and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Although loans made by the IMF often
require countries to introduce
painful austerity measures that
provoke a backlash from angry
citizens, some governments are able
to negotiate more favorable terms
than others. Original data on the
substantive content of IMF loans
show that governments leverage
imminent elections to obtain more
lenient loan terms. Conditions that
require labor market reforms in
exchange for IMF financing are
relatively less stringent in loans
negotiated within six months before
a pending democratic election, all
else equal. The further away
elections are from loan
negotiations, the more stringent the
labor conditions included in
countries’ loan programs. Elections
give governments leverage in their
international negotiations and this
leverage is effective even when
states negotiate with unelected
bureaucrats during times of economic
crisis."
International organization
Curtis, K. Amber & Jupille,
Joseph & Leblang, David
Iceland on the rocks: the mass
political economy of sovereign debt
resettlement
VUOSI: 2014 (vol. 68): nro: 3 Summer
s. 721-740
tallennuspvm: 20140813
[original abstract:] "We undertake
an individual- level analysis of
mass political behavior toward
sovereign debt resettlement by
leveraging the unique circumstances
of a 2011 referendum on debt
repayment in Iceland. This allows us
to engage broader questions about
mass international political
economy. Against the recent thrust
of a growing literature, we find
evidence of material economic
'pocketbook' effects - self-interest
- on voting behavior, operating
alongside symbolic/sociotropic and
partisan/political logics. Contrary
to expectations, these self-interest
effects are not conditional on voter
sophistication. We conclude that
conventional sampling frames may be
inappropriate for understanding
contemporary democratic contestation
over international economic policy."
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