Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 272
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-9308-5 • Paperback • October 2001 • $61.00 • (£47.00)
Kenneth A. Rodman is the William R. Cotter Distinguished Teaching Professor of Government at Colby College.
Part 1 Extraterritorial Sanctions from the Early Cold War Era through the Pipeline Sanctions
Chapter 2 Extraterritorial Sanctions: Policy Rationales and Legal Controversies
Chapter 3 Sanctions at Bay? The Rise and Partial Decline of Extraterritorial Sanctions
Chapter 4 Sanctions Defiant? The Reagan Administration, Extraterritorial Sanctions and the Lessons of the Pipeline Case
Part 5 Contemporary Case Studies
Chapter 6 The Decline and Partial Return of Foreign Subsidiary Sanctions
Chapter 7 Direct Investors: Instruments of Coercion or Hostages of the Target State?
Chapter 8 Targeting Foreign Corporations: Helms-Burton and the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act
Chapter 9 Think Globally, Sanction Locally: Grassroots Campaigns Against Multinationals in South Africa, Burma and Nigeria
Sanctions Beyond Borders is an excellent historical account of U.S. sanctions with an extraterritorial effect since WW II, fully up-to-date in its examination of the impact of domestic politics and NGO-campaigning. The book is also a sophisticated testing of current theories about multinational companies in the global economy indicating, they are less state-less as often thought and more linked into their political, cultural and legal domestic setting.
— Thomas Wälde, Jean Monnet Chair for EU Economic and Energy Law and executive director of the Center for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law at
As Rodman shows, when America's relative economic influence was supposedly so great in the early Cold War, U.S. officials felt more constrained by their sense of duty to allies and allied institutions. Now, for better or worse, it is harder for U.S. leaders to discern the common good.
— Foreign Affairs
Overall, in this definitive and very readable work, the author is rightfully skeptical of sanctions as a foreign policy instrument in a competitive environment where target countries usually have plenty of alternatives. Highly recommended for college, university, and professional library collections.
— Choice Reviews
If reading this book, and pondering the twenty or thirty episodes that he [Rodman] describes made me think through the problem of subsidiaries and sanctions once again, it may inspire other readers as well, whether they be policymakers, lawyers, or students of contemporary events.
— The American Journal Of International Law
Timely and provocative. Sanctions Beyond Borders is arguably the single best introduction to the topic today. It is comprehensively researched, theoretically sophisticated, rich in empirical detail, and well written. Aside from those scholars interested in sanctions specifically, the book should also appeal to those investigating domestic-international linkages, methodologists interested in testing theories against case studies, Cold War historians, and teachers of U.S. policy looking for interesting case study material to integrate into their courses...
— American Political Science Review
This original and provocative book challenges conventional wisdom. Rodman demonstrates that forces besides hegemonic power explain the success or failure of extraterritorial U.S. sanctions: domestic politics, public opinion, corporate interests, and back channel influence are all at work.
— Gary Hufbauer, Institute for International Economics
Timely and provocative.Sanctions Beyond Borders is arguably the single best introduction to the topic today. It is comprehensively researched, theoretically sophisticated, rich in empirical detail, and well written. Aside from those scholars interested in sanctions specifically, the book should also appeal to those investigating domestic-international linkages, methodologists interested in testing theories against case studies, Cold War historians, and teachers of U.S. policy looking for interesting case study material to integrate into their courses.
— American Political Science Review