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Replication Data for: Counterfactual Coercion. Could Harsher Sanctions Against Russia Have Prevented the Worst?

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DataCite Commons2025-05-12 更新2025-05-17 收录
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https://dataverse.harvard.edu/citation?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/NL2V6S
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资源简介:
Numerous studies show that properly designed economic sanctions can force the tar-get to refrain from violating international norms. However, policymakers cannot inte-grate this finding into their ex ante assessments of whether more forceful coercive measures could prevent military coups, human rights violations, or a war of aggression such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In this article, we address this shortcoming and introduce counterfactual predictions to answer the what-if question of whether adequate sanctions by the European Union and the United States could have provoked targets to abandon severe norm violations. To this end, a training data set from 1989 to 2008 is used to predict the success of sanctions from 2009 to 2015. Our policy coun-terfactuals for key sanction cases suggest that stricter EU coercion against Russia after the annexation of Crimea could have triggered policy concessions from the regime of President Putin.
提供机构:
Harvard Dataverse
创建时间:
2024-06-25
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