A Behavioral Approach to International Legal Cooperation

Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Brad L. LeVeck, D. Victor, J. Fowler
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

International relations theories have largely ignored the role of individual people who play key roles in treaty design and participation; instead, that scholarship assumes that other factors, such as treaty enforcement, matter most. We use experiments drawn from behavioral economics and cognitive psychology — along with a substantive survey focused on international trade treaties — to illustrate how two traits (patience and strategic skills) could influence treaty outcomes. More patient and strategic players favor treaties with larger numbers of countries (and thus larger long-term benefits). These behavioral traits had much larger impacts on simulated treaty outcomes than treaty enforcement mechanisms. This study is based on a sample of 509 university students yet provides a baseline for future experimental and survey research on actual policy elites who design and implement treaties; a preliminary sample of 73 policy elites displays the same main patterns described in this paper.
国际法律合作的行为取向
国际关系理论在很大程度上忽视了在条约设计和参与中发挥关键作用的个人的作用;相反,这种学术假设其他因素,比如条约的执行,才是最重要的。我们利用行为经济学和认知心理学的实验,以及一项针对国际贸易条约的实质性调查,来说明两种特征(耐心和战略技能)如何影响条约的结果。更有耐心和战略的参与者倾向于与更多国家签订条约(从而获得更大的长期利益)。这些行为特征对模拟条约结果的影响远大于条约执行机制。这项研究基于509名大学生的样本,但为未来对设计和实施条约的实际政策精英的实验和调查研究提供了基线;73位政策精英的初步样本显示出与本文描述的相同的主要模式。
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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