Abstract
While the current practice of the United Nations Security Council, the European Union, and the United States leans towards imposing only targeted sanctions in most of the cases, private actors often complain about inability to process financial transactions, ship goods, or deliver services in countries where sanctions targets are located. The impact of sanctions often ends up being widespread and indiscriminate because sanctions are implemented by for-profit actors. This article investigates how for-profit actors relate to the imposition of sanctions, how they reflect them in their decisions, and how they interact with the public authorities. The findings of our research show that for-profit actors, with the possible exception of the largest multinationals, do not engage with public authorities before the imposition of sanctions. The behaviour of for-profit actors in the implementation phase is in line with the assumption of firms and business as profit-maximisers.Weighting the profits from business against the costs of (non-)compliance and make the decisions that in their view maximise their profit. Indeed, de-risking seems to be the most common approach by the companies due to the uncertainties produced by the multiple and overlapping sanctions regimes imposed by the United Nations, the European Union, and the United States.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | European Journal of International Security |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 7 Jan 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The authors thank the participants in the workshops and the interviewees for sharing their insights and experiences. We would like to thank Eugenio Cusumano and Lukas Linsi as well as the editor and the three reviewers for their feedback. All remaining errors are our own. Deborah Bakker provided invaluable research assistance. Madeline Zutt proofread the manuscript with much care. The Independent Social Research Foundation generously funded the research underpinning this article. Michal Onderco thankfully acknowledges support from the Charles University Research Centre program UNCE/ HUM/028 (Peace Research Center Prague/Faculty of Social Sciences). 1
Funding Information:
The authors thank the participants in the workshops and the interviewees for sharing their insights and experiences. We would like to thank Eugenio Cusumano and Lukas Linsi as well as the editor and the three reviewers for their feedback. All remaining errors are our own. Deborah Bakker provided invaluable research assistance. Madeline Zutt proofread the manuscript with much care. The Independent Social Research Foundation generously funded the research underpinning this article. Michal Onderco thankfully acknowledges support from the Charles University Research Centre program UNCE/ HUM/028 (Peace Research Center Prague/Faculty of Social Sciences).
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2021.