An expansive investigation of the efficacy of trade agreements, economic sanctions, and other economic strategies for promoting peace

Look Inside

Description

In The Political Economy of Regional Peacemaking, scholars examine the efficacy of trade agreements, economic sanctions, and other strategies of economic statecraft for the promotion of peace both between rival states and across conflict-ridden regions more generally. In the introduction, Steven E. Lobell and Norrin M. Ripsman pose five central questions: (1) What types of economic statecraft, including incentives and sanctions, can interested parties employ? (2) Who are the appropriate targets in the rival states—state leaders, economic and social elites, or society as whole? (3) When should specific economic instruments be used to promote peace—prior to negotiations, during negotiations, after signature of the treaty, or during implementation of the treaty? (4) What are the limits and risks of economic statecraft and economic interdependence? (5) How can economic statecraft be used to move from a bilateral peace agreement to regional peace?

The chapters that follow are grouped in three sections, corresponding to the three stages of peacemaking: reduction or management of regional conflict; peacemaking or progress toward a peace treaty; and maintenance of bilateral peace and the regionalization of the peace settlement. In each chapter, the contributors consider the five key questions from a variety of methodological, historical, cultural, and empirical perspectives, drawing data from the Pacific, the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. The conclusion expands on several themes found in the chapters and proposes an agenda for future research.

Steven E. Lobell is Professor of Political Science at the University of Utah.  Norrin M. Ripsman is Professor of Political Science at Concordia University in Montréal, Canada.

“The study of the relationship between economic interactions and militarized conflict has deep roots in international relations. This volume provides a refined advancement in that field. The contributors not only narrow and deepen this analysis, they do so by employing an array of conceptual and methodological approaches.”
—Lisa L. Martin, Professor of Political Science, University of Wisconsin–Madison