
This book represents one of the first comparative studies of international treaty ratification processes in multiple issue areas. The study sets out to fill a gap in political science scholarship by investigating the role that international and domestic political actors and conditions play in the critical, post-commitment phase of cooperation. The book employs the comparative case study method, drawing on original research, elite interviews, and discursive analyses of government documents in Europe, Australia, and North America. Cases examine a select number of treaties on trade cooperation, the environment, European integration, and the nuclear non-proliferation regime. The book concludes that norms and executive strategies play an especially significant role in shaping ratification outcomes. The study has implications for theories of international negotiation and foreign policy analysis as well as the practice of diplomacy.
This book investigates the complex interplay between domestic political actors and international commitments to determine why certain international treaties succeed or fail during the ratification phase. Author Jeffrey S. Lantis, a scholar of foreign policy and international relations, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze how executive strategies and political norms influence the post-commitment stage of cooperation. By examining diverse geopolitical contexts, the study argues that the ratification process is not merely a legal formality but a highly contested political arena shaped by both internal and external pressures.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of international negotiation and the domestic politics of foreign policy. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the comparative case study methodology employed throughout the text.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191560138
ISBN-13:
9780191560132
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