Follow
Bryan R Early
Bryan R Early
Professor of Political Science, University at Albany, SUNY
Verified email at albany.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Busted sanctions
BR Early
Busted Sanctions, 2015
253*2015
Sleeping with your friends' enemies: An explanation of sanctions-busting trade
BR Early
International Studies Quarterly 53 (1), 49-71, 2009
1712009
Unmasking the black knights: Sanctions busters and their effects on the success of economic sanctions
BR Early
Foreign Policy Analysis 7 (4), 381-402, 2011
1312011
Alliances and trade with sanctioned states: A study of US economic sanctions, 1950–2000
BR Early
Journal of Conflict Resolution 56 (3), 547-572, 2012
882012
" Larger than a party, yet smaller than a state": locating Hezbollah's place within Lebanon's state and society
BR Early
World Affs. 168, 115, 2005
822005
Searching in the shadows: The impact of economic sanctions on informal economies
B Early, D Peksen
Political Research Quarterly 72 (4), 821-834, 2019
752019
Economic sanctions, international institutions, and sanctions busters: When does institutionalized cooperation help sanctioning efforts?
BR Early, R Spice
Foreign policy analysis 11 (3), 339-360, 2015
742015
Out of the shadows or into the dark? Economic openness, IMF programs, and the growth of shadow economies
RG Blanton, B Early, D Peksen
The Review of International Organizations 13, 309-333, 2018
582018
Governments, rebels, and the use of child soldiers in internal armed conflicts: A global analysis, 1987–2007
R Tynes, BR Early
Peace Economics, Peace Science and Public Policy 21 (1), 79-110, 2015
512015
Do sanctions always stigmatize? The effects of economic sanctions on foreign aid
BR Early, A Jadoon
International Interactions 42 (2), 217-243, 2016
502016
Going for the gold: Status-seeking behavior and Olympic performance
JP Rhamey Jr, BR Early
International Area Studies Review 16 (3), 244-261, 2013
502013
Going fishing versus hunting whales: Explaining changes in how the US enforces economic sanctions
BR Early, KA Preble
Security Studies 29 (2), 231-267, 2020
432020
Exploring the final frontier: An empirical analysis of global civil space proliferation
BR Early
International Studies Quarterly 58 (1), 55-67, 2014
422014
Loss aversion and foreign policy resolve
JD Berejikian, BR Early
Political Psychology 34 (5), 649-671, 2013
412013
Still unjust, just in different ways: how targeted sanctions fall short of just war theory's principles
BR Early, M Schulzke
International Studies Review 21 (1), 57-80, 2019
402019
Economic sanctions in flux: Enduring challenges, new policies, and defining the future research agenda
BR Early, M Cilizoglu
International Studies Perspectives 21 (4), 438-477, 2020
372020
Following START: Risk acceptance and the 1991–1992 presidential nuclear initiatives
M Fuhrmann, BR Early
Foreign Policy Analysis 4 (1), 21-43, 2008
342008
Complying by denying: Explaining why States develop nonproliferation export controls
DM Stinnett, BR Early, C Horne, J Karreth
International Studies Perspectives 12 (3), 308-326, 2011
302011
Acquiring Foreign Nuclear Assistance in the Middle East: Strategic Lessons from the United Arab Emirates
BR Early
Nonproliferation Review 17 (2), 259-280, 2010
242010
Making sanctions work: Promoting compliance, punishing violations, and discouraging sanctions busting
BR Early
Research Handbook on Economic Sanctions, 167-186, 2021
212021
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–20