This paper reexamines economic sanctions research and identifies explanatory variables used by many previous theoretical and empirical research studies on the effectiveness of voluntary and non-voluntary economic sanctions since World War I. A normative legal, political, and economic methodology is used to measure effectiveness of economic sanctions as a random walk process. The paper concludes that choosing a target and imposing economic sanctions is a random process that occurs when a sender is faced with a real or perceived threat. Sanctions are imposed as an alternative to inaction or going to war. The theory and research on effectiveness of sanctions has been a mere exercise in running regressions on a series of random numbers and do not shed any light to guide policymaking.
CITATION STYLE
Shojai, S., & Root, P. S. (2013). Effectiveness Of Economic Sanctions: Empirical Research Revisited. International Business & Economics Research Journal (IBER), 12(11), 1479. https://doi.org/10.19030/iber.v12i11.8184
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