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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Moynihan Institutes Study of Global Politics seminar series
  presents&nbsp\;Caileigh Glenn from Middlebury College.The United States o
 ften imposes targeted financial sanctions as a first-resort measure of for
 eign policy. Governments whose domestic firms are sanctioned can credibly 
 refrain from issuing a response due to the targeted nature of the sanction
 . Yet governments sometimes respond with public hostility\, imposing count
 ermeasures and resisting the sanctions. Under what conditions do governmen
 ts retaliate in response to the imposition of targeted financial sanctions
  on subnational entities? In this talk\, Caileigh Glenn presents research 
 from her current book project on the conditions that prompt government hos
 tility in response to U.S. targeted financial sanctions. Using a new datas
 et on targeted financial sanctions imposed by the U.S. between 2011 and 20
 19\, she identifies sanction-specific and domestic-level conditions that m
 ake public government hostility likely. Caileigh Glenn is assistant profes
 sor of political science at Middlebury College where she researches and te
 aches topics of international relations and foreign policy.
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DTSTAMP:20260510T174618Z
DTSTART:20260424T160000Z
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SUMMARY:Caileigh Glenn | Countermeasures: Targeted Financial Sanctions and 
 Government Hostility
UID:RFCALITEM639140175783817749
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The Moynihan Institutes Study of Global Pol
 itics seminar series presents&nbsp\;Caileigh Glenn from Middlebury College
 .</p><p>The United States often imposes targeted financial sanctions as a 
 first-resort measure of foreign policy. Governments whose domestic firms a
 re sanctioned can credibly refrain from issuing a response due to the targ
 eted nature of the sanction. Yet governments sometimes respond with public
  hostility\, imposing countermeasures and resisting the sanctions. Under w
 hat conditions do governments retaliate in response to the imposition of t
 argeted financial sanctions on subnational entities? </p><p>In this talk\,
  Caileigh Glenn presents research from her current book project on the con
 ditions that prompt government hostility in response to U.S. targeted fina
 ncial sanctions. Using a new dataset on targeted financial sanctions impos
 ed by the U.S. between 2011 and 2019\, she identifies sanction-specific an
 d domestic-level conditions that make public government hostility likely. 
 </p><p><strong>Caileigh Glenn</strong> is assistant professor of political
  science at Middlebury College where she researches and teaches topics of 
 international relations and foreign policy.</p>
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