Excited to see my paper with @clestancona published in @BJPolS. We examine the hide-and-seek dynamic between governments and secrecy-seeking actors in international finance. We show that sanctions enforcement provokes actors in target countries to turn to low-supervision OFCs.
🚨In a new paper with great @menevisc & @efetokdemir, we find that sanction threats--even when credibly backed--do not increase public support for concessions in the target (🇹🇷case). Moreover, positive inducements provoke backlash among some groups.
https://t.co/EXwixjVIho
How does ending sanctions influence the target state's capabilities? @menevisc tackles this question through a game theoretical model of sanction removal to find sanctions are more likely to end, if senders can detect the target state's compliance. https://t.co/KffwfjHLZv
Economic sanctions could escalate rather than reduce violence and support for terrorism.
Find out why in the article from @nbapat & @menevisc argue
🔗 https://t.co/I6NrsNQqwz
Why did states close their border during COVID-19? @USC’s Tobias Heinrich, @USC alumnus @wtchristiansen, @menevisc, and Yoshi Kobayashi provide some answers at @DuckofMinerva (based on their research in @AJPS_Editor).
https://t.co/nPz8mUo6DB
It was so much fun hosting this amazing group of scholars together with @HanaSaadAttia in @GIGA_Institute‘s Berlin office to discuss new scholarship on sanctions and its policy implications. Thank you to everyone for lots of food for thought & for surviving yesterday‘s dinner 😉
🔔Why do countries close borders during pandemics?
I am thrilled that “No Entry in a Pandemic: Public Support for Border Closures” co-authored with Yoshiharu Kobayashi, Tobias Heinrich, and @wtchristiansen is published at @AJPS_Editor! https://t.co/5sbVXqUCKL
Today, host Jon Olson spoke with St. Olaf professor Dr. Menevis Cilizoglu @menevisc about international sanctions, how they are used, and how effective they can be.
https://t.co/rC90aldHeQ
Guest contributors @menevisc of @Stolaf and @clestancona of @UofSC discuss sanctions against #Russia, and how offshore financial services might get in the way of #sanctions as a policy tool. https://t.co/YXlzuJ2fCS
@menevisc and I wrote a brief blog post about Putin, offshore finance, and US sanctions. We originally had “there’s much more than yachts offshore” as the title but… I guess not everyone shares our fantastic sense of humor.
https://t.co/Zuzn2gs9Or
Really enjoyed presenting research coauthored with @menevisc in today’s @perryworldhouse seminar series (thanks for suggesting us, @BaileeDonahue!).
Great feedback for our paper about the “hide and seek” of global monitoring and evasion in offshore financial centers.
This makes my little IPE heart (shhh, don't tell the conflict scholars) happy! Excited to work on offshore finance with a great group of folks and my co-organizer, @menevisc!
@menevisc and @nbapat explore how the possibility of "sanctions-proofing" in target states affects the imposition of sanctions: https://t.co/SbYudBh10f (2/7)