File:Iranian Sanctions An Actor-Centric Analysis (IA iranisanctionsan109456852).pdf

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Iranian Sanctions An Actor-Centric Analysis   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Author
Plumer, Andrew G.
image of artwork listed in title parameter on this page
Title
Iranian Sanctions An Actor-Centric Analysis
Publisher
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
Description

Economic sanctions concerning Irans nuclear program are not having their intended political effect. Uranium enrichment continues despite sanctions. This thesis argues that international economic smart sanctions are failing because they are not altering the relative positions of power between the factional actors in the Iranian political economy, and because the actors who desire to continue enrichment remain in control of the economy and state institutions. The Iranian political economy is a clientelistic state, with differing rival autonomous patron-actors and associated client bases all competing for a larger slice of economic rents. Economic sanctions have failed because the more conservative actors and their clients have entrenched themselves in the economy and control of these rents, thereby diverting the costs of sanctions to their political competitors while simultaneously using sanctions to strengthen their own client base. Research indicates that while stronger economic sanctions could be designed, their chances of success remain unknown. Only a complete and thoroughly enforced embargo on Iranian petrochemical sales, with a simultaneous economic strengthening of reformist actors in the political economy, who are open to a nuclear enrichment policy change, will result in the political goals sanctions are designed to achieve.


Subjects: Iran; Sanctions; Economic Sanctions; Globalization; Ulama; Political Economy; Islamic Economics; Green Movement; Ahmadinejad; IRGC; Uranium Enrichment; WMD; Regime Reform; Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps; Shia Cleric
Language English
Publication date March 2012
Current location
IA Collections: navalpostgraduateschoollibrary; fedlink
Accession number
iranisanctionsan109456852
Source
Internet Archive identifier: iranisanctionsan109456852
https://archive.org/download/iranisanctionsan109456852/iranisanctionsan109456852.pdf

Licensing

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Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work prepared by an officer or employee of the United States Government as part of that person’s official duties under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105 of the US Code. Note: This only applies to original works of the Federal Government and not to the work of any individual U.S. state, territory, commonwealth, county, municipality, or any other subdivision. This template also does not apply to postage stamp designs published by the United States Postal Service since 1978. (See § 313.6(C)(1) of Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices). It also does not apply to certain US coins; see The US Mint Terms of Use.

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current05:51, 22 July 2020Thumbnail for version as of 05:51, 22 July 20201,275 × 1,650, 168 pages (618 KB) (talk | contribs)FEDLINK - United States Federal Collection iranisanctionsan109456852 (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork8) (batch 1993-2020 #19356)

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