International Organization (IO) is a leading peer-reviewed journal that covers the entire field of international affairs. The journal is continuously ranked among the top journals in the field.
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141 to 150 of 166 Results
Jan 11, 2020
Carter, David B.; Poast, Paul, 2020, "Replication Data for: Barriers to Trade: How Border Walls Affect Trade Relations", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/9HLR8B, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:MJiFF7nYt46Qz8XprDd2KA== [fileUNF]
Since trade must cross borders, to what extent do border walls affect trade flows? We argue that border walls can reduce trade flows. Even if the objective is to only stem illicit flows, border walls heighten ``border effects'' that can also inhibit legal cross-border flows. Using a gravity model of trade that reflects recent developments in both e...
Jan 11, 2020
Duursma, Allard, 2020, "Replication Data for: African Solutions to African Challenges: Explaining the Role of Legitimacy in Mediating Civil Wars in Africa", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/KPRL5U, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:Jb1UMlYbEcrTr7me8jj/5w== [fileUNF]
The current scholarly literature on the international mediation of civil wars predominantly draws on a rationalist-materialist perspective. This perspective suggests that the ticket to mediation success is the material manipulation of the bargaining environment by third parties with a high degree of economic and military resources. In this article,...
Jan 11, 2020
Kennard, Amanda, 2020, "Replication Data for: The Enemy of My Enemy: When Firms Support Climate Change Regulation", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/26HDEO, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:VJ+RRpqvKm+4kvE7JYFL/Q== [fileUNF]
Policies to mitigate global climate change entail significant economic costs. Yet a growing number of firms lobby in favor of regulation to mitigate carbon emissions. Why do firms support environmental regulations that directly increase production costs? This question is all the more puzzling in a globalized economy where regulation may undermine t...
Jan 11, 2020
Lichtenheld, Adam G., 2020, "Replication Data for: Explaining Population Displacement Strategies in Civil Wars: A Cross National Analysis", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/J4WZGT, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:hL+bQCcMa09dlII8ZoxbaA== [fileUNF]
Why do combatants uproot civilians in wartime? This paper identifies cross-national variation in three population displacement strategies -- cleansing, depopulation, and forced relocation -- and tests different explanations for their use by state actors. I advance a new "assortative" theory to explain forced relocation, the most common type. I argu...
Jan 11, 2020
Putnam, Tonya L., 2020, "Replication Data for: Mingling and Strategic Augmentation of International Legal Obligations", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/7BLIA3, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:fjEOA0jznJKqS1IeF3C8Kg== [fileUNF]
Managing foreign affairs is in no small measure about anticipating the actions (and non-actions) of others, and about taking steps to limit the unexpected -- and the undesired. Law has long been recognized as important to these tasks. Nevertheless, standard IR treatments often overlook important properties of law, even when trying to account for in...
Jan 11, 2020
Stanton, Jessica A., 2020, "Replication Data for: Rebel Groups, International Humanitarian Law, and Civil War Outcomes in the Post-Cold War Era", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/5PEDGW, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:ZNLfwTqfOAIOYpJTQ5ZBCQ== [fileUNF]
Do rebel group violations of international humanitarian law during civil war – in particular, attacks on noncombatant civilians – affect conflict outcomes? I argue that in the post-Cold War era, rebel groups who do not target civilians have been able to use the framework of international humanitarian law to appeal for diplomatic support from Wester...
Jan 11, 2020
Schneider, Christina J.; Jennifer, Tobin, 2020, "Replication Data for: The Political Economy of Bilateral Bailouts", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HJ9SWF, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:EDTgiNGha1+9NB6yLgtKsA== [fileUNF]
IMF loans during times of financial crisis often occur in conjunction with bilateral financial rescues. These bilateral bailouts are substantial in size and a central component of international cooperation during financial crises. We analyze the political economy of bilateral bailouts and study the trade-offs that potential creditor governments exp...
Jan 11, 2020
Tomz, Michael; Weeks, Jessica L. P.; Yarhi-Milo, Keren, 2020, "Replication Data for: Public Opinion and Decisions about Military Force in Democracies", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/AUNLOB, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Many theories of international relations assume that public opinion exerts a powerful effect on foreign policy in democracies. Previous research, based on observational data, has reached conflicting conclusions about this foundational assumption. We use experiments to examine two mechanisms—responsiveness and selection—through which opinion could s...
Jan 11, 2020
Bush, Sarah Sunn; Prather, Lauren, 2020, "Replication Data for: Political Side-taking by Outside Powers and Mass Attitudes Towards International Economic Engagement", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/AD8CKP, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:w/n5f8pOaFEGi4FeJRm2Jg== [fileUNF]
What explains variation in individual preferences for foreign economic engagement? Although a large and growing literature addresses that question, little research examines how partner countries affect public opinion on policies such as trade, foreign aid, and investment. We construct a new theory arguing that political side-taking by outside power...
Jan 11, 2020
Hashimoto, Barry, 2020, "Replication Data for: Autocratic Consent to International Law: the Case of the International Criminal Court's Jurisdiction, 1998--2017", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/U3ZQYY, Harvard Dataverse, V1
This article contributes to an understanding of why autocrats have accepted the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. Leveraging their ability to obstruct their own prosecution, autocrats have traded off the risk of unwanted prosecutions against the deterrent threat that prosecutions pose to political rivals and patrons of their enemies...
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