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Designing foreign policy: Voters, special interest groups, and economic sanctions

Authors
McLean, Elena V.Whang, Taehee
Issue Date
9월-2014
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Keywords
economic sanctions; foreign policy; human rights; public opinion; special interest groups; targeted sanctions
Citation
JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH, v.51, no.5, pp.589 - 602
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH
Volume
51
Number
5
Start Page
589
End Page
602
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/97562
DOI
10.1177/0022343314533811
ISSN
0022-3433
Abstract
The literature on economic sanctions has long studied sender countries' policymaking as a simple choice between imposing sanctions to extract concessions from the targeted country and doing nothing. We depart from this simplifying assumption and analyze sanctions as a multifaceted foreign policy instrument. We argue that senders design sanction policies in response to policy preferences of two domestic constituencies. Voters expect a response to an international dispute in the form of some policy, such as economic sanctions; hence, the sender's policymakers seek to demonstrate their competence in foreign affairs by imposing sanctions. Once the policymakers announce the use of sanctions, special interest groups that stand to experience economic losses when this foreign policy is implemented pressure the policymakers to choose sanction measures limiting such losses. As a result, the policymakers design sanction policies to include measures that will be less detrimental to special interest groups. We test our theoretical argument using the Threat and Imposition of Sanctions data and show that, while pressures from public opinion increase the likelihood of sanctions, special interest groups that benefit from the relationship with the target country are associated with a lower probability of the use of sanction measures that would impose substantial costs on domestic interest groups.
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