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International Economic Sanctions
Improving the Haphazard U.S. Legal Regime
This is a comprehensive analysis of the myriad of US laws for imposing economic sanctions for foreign policy reasons.
Barry E. Carter (Author)
9780521067065, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 26 June 2008
308 pages
0.5 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm, 0.46 kg
This is a comprehensive analysis of the myriad US laws for imposing economic sanctions for foreign policy reasons. Against a broad range of target countries, the United States has resorted increasingly to a variety of economic pressures as a major tool in its foreign policy. Examples include South Africa, Panama, Libya, Nicaragua, the Soviet Union, Poland and Iran. The book is written in a lucid style designed for both non-lawyer and lawyer. It begins with a brief history and examination of the effectiveness of economic sanctions, drawing upon the existing literature. It then breaks ground by carefully analysing the wide range of US laws that authorize controls on government programmes (such as foreign aid), US exports, imports, private financial transactions, and assistance by international financial institutions. The study offers discussion of the 1988 omnibus trade bill and includes a useful chapter examining the widely differing laws of major US allies, notably the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and the European Community.
1. Introduction Scope of the book
2. Overview of the history and effectiveness of sanctions
3. Non-emergency laws: an overview and bilateral government programs
4. Exports from the United States
5. Imports to the United States
6. Private financial transactions
7. International financial institutions
8. Miscellaneous laws for non-emergencies
9. Present laws for a declared national emergency
10. Possible powers of the President beyond the statutes
11. Looking to the allies
12. Planning for the future.
Subject Areas: Macroeconomics [KCB]
