Sanctions are a tool used by political actors to induce foreign countries, firms or individuals to alter their behavior. As nonmilitary coercive measure, they have the potential to disrupt the international business environment, often on short notice, and change the rules of the game. Synthesizing the available evidence on the economic and political impacts of sanctions, we explore how sanctions disrupt the institutional framework for international business and how firms respond to sanctions. Based on a review of available scholarly evidence, we discuss how theories of international business, such as institution-based view, resource-and knowledge-based view, resource dependency theory, and behavioral theories of the firm, can contribute to explaining the impact of sanctions. At the same time, we discuss how sanctions, as politically motivated disruptions, challenge some assumptions underlying these theories. Going forward, our research agenda on sanctions is likely to help firms and governments to strategize in a geopolitically sensitive world.
机构:Grad Inst Int & Dev Studies IHEID, Geneva, Switzerland
Belenkov, Vadim
Biersteker, Thomas
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Grad Inst Int & Dev Studies IHEID, Geneva, Switzerland
Maison Paix, Grad Inst Int & Dev Studies, Chemin Eugene Rigot 2, CH-1202 Geneva, SwitzerlandGrad Inst Int & Dev Studies IHEID, Geneva, Switzerland
Biersteker, Thomas
MGIMO REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS,
2019,
(03):
: 7
-
16