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Treaty Compliance and Violation

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2010

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Annual Reviews
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Simmons, Beth Ann. 2010. “Treaty Compliance and Violation.” Annual Review of Political Science 13 (1) (May): 273-296. doi:10.1146/annurev.polisci.12.040907.132713. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev.polisci.12.040907.132713.

Abstract

International law has enjoyed a recent renaissance as an important subfield of study within international relations. Two trends are evident in the recent literature. First, the obsession with theoretical labels is on the decline. Second, empirical, especially quantitative, work is burgeoning. This article reviews the literature in four issues areas—security, war, and peace; international trade; protection of the environment; and human rights—and concludes we have a much stronger basis for assessing claims about compliance and violation now than was the case only a few years ago. Still, the literature suffers from a few weaknesses, including problems of selection and endogeneity of treaties themselves and an enduring state-centric focus, despite the fact that researchers recognize that nonstate and substate actors influence treaty behavior. Nonetheless, the quality and quantity of new work demonstrates that international law has regained an important place in the study of international politics.

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Treaty Compliance and Violation… : DASH Story 2016-09-10
I am currently enrolled in the University of Alaska Fairbanks' Arctic and Northern Studies Masters program, with a focus on Arctic Policy. I am Inupiaq and am working hard at trying to figure out how to foster peaceful dialog between nations in order to keep the Arctic war-free. Access to these kinds of articles for my studies for the next two years is going to be essential. Thank you.