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ID155712
Title ProperPolitics of treaty signature
Other Title Informationthe role of diplomats and ties that bind
LanguageENG
AuthorElsig, Manfred ;  Karolina, Milewicz
Summary / Abstract (Note)The literature on international cooperation through legal commitments focuses chiefly on treaty ratification. What has received much less attention is that before states ratify treaties, they commit to treaties through the act of signature. This article addresses this research gap by investigating how a state’s decision to sign a treaty is affected by its diplomatic representation during treaty negotiations. Conceptualizing signature as a commitment step, we argue that participation in treaty negotiations translates into a “ties-that-bind” effect creating incentives for diplomats to support the treaty text leading to treaty signature. Our empirical analysis uses a new data set on signature and tests the argument for 52 multilateral treaties concluded between 1990 and 2005. Results confirm that participation in treaty making matters for signature but not necessarily for ratification.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Negotiation Vol. 22, No.3; 2017: p.521 – 543
Journal SourceInternational Negotiation Vol: 22 No 3
Key WordsDiplomatic Representation ;  Ratification ;  Treaty Making ;  Treaty Signature


 
 
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