31 to 40 of 716 Results
Mar 28, 2025
Ju, Changwook; Byun, Joshua, 2024, "Replication Data for: Under No Circumstances? What the Chinese Really Think about the Wartime Use of Nuclear Weapons", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/DQ0W5I, Harvard Dataverse, V2
The idea of using nuclear weapons to kill noncombatants is said to evoke strong moral opprobrium among millions of individuals across the globe, such that national leaders should be constrained from using the weapons even when such a decision would be strategically sensible. Classical area scholarship and recent survey evidence suggest that this “n... |
Mar 28, 2025
Peez, Anton; Felix S Bethke, 2025, "Replication Data for: Does Public Opinion on Foreign Policy Affect Elite Preferences? Evidence from the 2022 US Sanctions against Russia", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/P8KSED, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Does public opinion on international affairs affect elites’ policy preferences? Most research assumes that it does, but this key assumption is difficult to test empirically given limited research access to elite decision-makers. We examine elite responsiveness to public opinion on sanctioning Russia during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. We f... |
Mar 28, 2025
Haglund, Jillienne; Hillebrecht, Courtney, 2025, "Replication Data for: Moving the Needle: Recommendation Precision and Compliance with Women’s Rights Recommendations", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/P7SHJ5, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:rj2LUTpL3wa/QiCDSe5UzA== [fileUNF]
International human rights institutions impose obligations on their member states that extend long past the ratification stage. Each year, states receive tens, or even hundreds, of recommendations from international human rights bodies. These recommendations demand that states change their human rights policies and practices. While recent scholarsh... |
Mar 28, 2025
Postnikov, Evgeny; Jonas Gamso, 2025, "Replication Data for: The Design of Autocratic Trade Agreements: Economic Integration and Political Survival", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/3Z4MQL, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:QRVzUwI9KDZuM/AI4ndQZw== [fileUNF]
The number of preferential trade agreements signed among non-democratic states (autocratic PTAs) has grown significantly over the last decades. Trade policy scholarship remains silent on the institutional design of these autocratic economic arrangements. In this paper, we explore the core institutional characteristic of autocratic PTAs—their depth.... |
Mar 28, 2025
Tan, Yeling; Dallas, Mark; Farrell, Henry; Newman, Abraham, 2025, "Replication Data for: Driven to Self-Reliance: Technological Interdependence and the Chinese Innovation Ecosystem", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/MNVZUN, Harvard Dataverse, V1
States face a dilemma on how to balance gains from technological advancement with the risks of dependence. Technology is central to government objectives of security and growth. As innovation systems become globalized, countries cooperate to catch up and stay at the innovation frontier. Interdependence, however, also exposes states to potential coe... |
Mar 28, 2025
Kutty, Sumitha Narayanan; Ladwig III, Walter C, 2025, "Replication Data for: Nonresident Prime Ministers? Measuring India’s Foreign Policy Orientation via Leadership Travel", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/XXUAQ2, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:kFO36TumhuYnrFz6gyVwrg== [fileUNF]
As a rising India has sought both standing and recognition in the international system, observers have debated whether revisionist or status quo tendencies have characterized the country’s engagement with the outside world since the end of the Cold War. One way to gain insight into such issues is to study the behavior of its apex leaders. Face-to-f... |
Mar 28, 2025
Huikuri, Tuuli-Anna; Shim, Sujeong, 2025, "Replication Data for: Balancing International Commitments and Democratic Accountability: Exit Clauses in Investment Agreements", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HQ9GPM, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:nTNhZNBeDsPhfsi5DGFshg== [fileUNF]
Why do states sign international agreements with varying commitment lengths? Growing literature examines when states exit international institutions. However, international agreements differ in how long a state must commit before it is legally free after a withdrawal decision. Notably, bilateral investment treaties (BITs) exhibit significant variat... |
Mar 21, 2025
Moyer, Jonathan D; Meisel, Collin J; Szymanski-Burgos, Adam; Kurkul, Alexandra; Casiraghi, Matteo C M; Kurkul, Alexandra; Hughes, Marianne; Kettlun, Whitney; McKee, Kylie X; Matthews, Austin S, 2025, "Replication Data for: When Heads of Government and State (HOGS) Fly: Introducing the Country and Organizational Leader Travel (COLT) Dataset Measuring Foreign Travel by HOGS", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/87YG4K, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:e9xv5/ITgM2WRbqqKJA1jQ== [fileUNF]
Despite representing a crucial day-to-day diplomatic tool, travel by heads of government and state (HOGS) has remained an under-investigated topic in international relations, inhibiting our ability to better understand how these visits change foreign aid, interstate conflict, diplomatic affinities, and more. Here, we fill that gap by introducing th... |
Mar 13, 2025
Chesler, Angela; Verdeja, Ernesto, 2025, "Replication Data for: Triggers of State-Led Mass Killing", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/H6UK7R, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Why do states initiate mass killing campaigns against their civilian populations? What explains the timing of state-led mass killing? Extant research has developed a sophisticated understanding of the general social, political, and economic conditions that elevate a country's risk of state-led mass killing. However, these conditions—which include f... |
Mar 10, 2025
Ghiselli, Andrea; Morgan, Pippa, 2025, "Replication Data for: Blowback: When China’s Belt and Road Initiative Meets Democratic Institutions", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BINUYG, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:TcbbotAl8xyCZ7I2OBJuXQ== [fileUNF]
China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has two interconnected goals: increasing China’s diplomatic clout and expanding the presence of Chinese companies overseas. However, contrary to the intuitive notion that good diplomacy creates economic opportunities, we argue that when the partner country is a democracy, these goals conflict. First, we hypoth... |