How the Prospect of Non-Compliance Affects Elite Preferences for International Cooperation: Evidence from a 'Lab in the Field' Experiment

E. Hafner-Burton, Brad L. LeVeck, D. Victor
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Uncertainty about a state’s own capacity to comply with an international agreement makes countries wary of international cooperation. There are a variety of possible explanations. That screening effect could result from the decision to avoid the costs associated with formal institutional enforcement. Alternatively, it could result from fear of informal retaliation, reputational loss, or the desire to abide by international norms. The empirical record of extensive treaty membership and high compliance offers little variation with which to evaluate these explanations. We develop an experimental survey conducted on 95 actual high level policy elites in the United States that allows us to look causally at the link between formal enforcement and decision maker preferences for cooperation under different conditions of uncertainty about their country’s future compliance. We provide the first elite-level evidence that uncertainty about future compliance with treaty obligations decreases policy makers’ willingness to cooperate by joining treaties. However, we also demonstrate that compliance uncertainty makes decision makers wary of cooperation more out of concern for the shadow of the future than for immediate threats of punishment imposed by institutional enforcement of treaty obligations. Uncertainty, rather than the costs associated with institutional enforcement, may be the driving force behind the screening effect, which is at least in part a matter of the personal dispositions of decision makers.
不服从的前景如何影响精英对国际合作的偏好:来自“实地实验室”实验的证据
一国自身遵守国际协议能力的不确定性使各国对国际合作持谨慎态度。有多种可能的解释。这种筛选效应可能是由于决定避免与正式制度执行有关的费用而产生的。或者,它可能是由于担心非正式报复、名誉损失或希望遵守国际准则而产生的。广泛的条约成员国和高度遵守的经验记录为评估这些解释提供了很少的变化。我们开展了一项实验调查,调查对象是美国95位实际的高层政策精英,这使我们能够从因果关系上研究正式执法与决策者在不同条件下的合作偏好之间的联系,这些条件对其国家未来的合规不确定。我们提供了第一个精英层面的证据,表明未来遵守条约义务的不确定性降低了政策制定者通过加入条约进行合作的意愿。然而,我们也证明,合规的不确定性使决策者对合作持谨慎态度,更多的是出于对未来阴影的担忧,而不是出于对机构执行条约义务所施加的惩罚的直接威胁的担忧。不确定性,而不是与制度执行相关的成本,可能是筛选效应背后的驱动力,这至少在一定程度上是决策者个人倾向的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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