161 to 170 of 242 Results
Apr 23, 2018
Bader, Julia, 2018, "Replication Data for: To sign or not to sign. Hegemony, Global Internet Governance, and the International Telecommunication Regulations", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/OCGMZV, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:irUkBmN74sY/JhzgAnI9dA== [fileUNF]
This article uses the issue area of global Internet governance to investigate US hegemony in the face of a rising hegemonic challenger, China. The paper exploits the controversies around the revised International Telecommunication Regulations at the 2012 World Conference on International Telecommunications in order to examine the preferences of ind... |
Apr 23, 2018
Calin, Costel; Buterbaugh, Kevin, 2018, "Replication Data for: Male vs. Female Career Ambassadors: Is the U.S. Foreign Service Still Biased?", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VZBJUC, Harvard Dataverse, V1
This paper examines the appointment of male versus female career diplomats to ambassadorial posts. We assess the role played by ambassadors’ individual characteristics including education, marital status, and the number of children, and host countries’ characteristics, such as quality of life and regime type, in determining if a male or female is a... |
Feb 6, 2018
Martinez Machain, Carla; Bell, Sam, 2018, "Replication Data for: Democracy, Transparency, and Secrecy in Crisis", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/0TIKAL, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Dataset and do file that replicate the analysis in the text. |
Feb 6, 2018
Meredith Wilf; Stephen Chaudoin, 2018, "Replication Data for: Interdependence, Networks, and Public Policy Support", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HQBRHO, Harvard Dataverse, V1
What arguments affect citizen support for policies? Most existing studies of preferences emphasize direct effects on personal welfare. Yet, for many regulatory policies ? like financial regulations ? recent theories highlight indirect policy externalities, such as interdependent foreign policies and/or global economic networks. We theorize that cit... |
Feb 6, 2018
Böhmelt, Tobias, 2018, "Replication Data for: International Treaty Ratification and Leader Turnover", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/GBQS6G, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Political leaders are ultimately responsible for their country’s foreign policy, but our understanding of how executive turnover affects the likelihood of international treaty ratification remains limited. For contributing to this debate, I define leader change as the replacement of the executive leader by a new one who relies on different social g... |
Nov 21, 2017
King, Jeffrey, 2017, "Replication Data for: Teaching Cooperation: The effect of shared neoliberalism on sanctioning behavior", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VUMBKB, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:0HY2RN2Jaf8Emblvd8NXNw== [fileUNF]
In the literature, sanctioning behavior has been linked to a number of aggregate domestic factors, most notably shared democracy in sender/target dyads. One missing factor, I argue, is the economic orientation of leaders and governments when making sanctioning decisions. Economic orientation is important because it dictates how states interact with... |
Jul 13, 2017
Eder, Franz, 2017, "Replication Data for: Making Concurrence-Seeking Visible: Groupthink, Discourse Networks, and the Iraq War 2003", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/FII5ZL, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Groupthink is one of the most popular and extensively discussed approaches in studying small group decision-making. However, the methodological question of how to make concurrence-seeking, as the key element of groupthink, visible, has received insufficient attention. To make group decision behind closed doors more visible and methodologically adva... |
Feb 21, 2017
Schenoni, Luis, 2017, "Replication Data for: The Argentina-Brazil Regional Power Transition", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HJQKTH, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:6G6PnhqappD5P5dz/QQdGw== [fileUNF]
Approximately four decades ago, the Southern Cone witnessed a transition from a balance of power between Argentina and Brazil to unipolarity under Brazilian primacy. While structural theories expect such processes to generate conflict, this particular transition was cooperative, leaving an interesting IR puzzle unresolved: Why has Argentina stopped... |
Feb 16, 2017
True, Jacqui, 2017, "Replication Data for Norm Entrepreneurship in Foreign Policy: William Hague and the Prevention of Sexual Violence in Conflict", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/5SPLEY, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:7/KvzRABTd4CGztiIWpXNw== [fileUNF]
Theories of international norm diffusion rely on accounts of entrepreneurial action - almost exclusively identified as normative non-state actors who persuade powerful states to change their behaviour. We argue that powerful state agents can (also) be moral norm entrepreneurs and explicate the foreign policy acts that make them significant agents o... |
Feb 16, 2017
Siroky, David; Simmons, Alan; Gvalia, Giorgi, 2017, "Replication Data for: Vodka or Bourbon? Foreign Policy Preferences Toward Russia and the US in Georgia", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/A3HBWB, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Many small states find themselves the objects of great power designs and efforts to export their preferred regimes. These attempts are well studied in the literature. However, mass opinion in small states where great powers compete for influence remains under-theorized as a factor that can shape preferences over foreign alliances and policies. This... |