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15 - A Global Analysis of Economic Sanctions and Civil Society Participation in Target Countries

from Part II - Legality, Legitimacy, and Accountability

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2025

Joy Gordon
Affiliation:
Loyola University, Chicago

Summary

What effect do economic sanctions have on civil society participation in target (sanctioned) countries? Do sanctions help or hurt civic activism in target societies? This chapter explores the degree to which economic sanctions affect the extent of civil engagement in target countries. It is argued that sanctions are likely to contribute to the deterioration of civil society participation in target countries through making non-state groups targets of state repression and impairing those groups’ organizational capacity. To substantiate the theoretical claims, cross- national sanctions data for the period 1989–2015 are combined with data on civil society participation. Results offer robust support that sanctions are detrimental to civil society and the suggested impact of sanctions is likely to be higher in the early rather than later years of sanctions imposition.

Information

Figure 0

Table 15.1 Economic sanctions and civil society participationTable 15.1 long description.

Figure 1

Figure 15.1 Economic sanctions and the predicted value of civil society participation (with 95% confidence interval).

Figure 2

Table 15.2 Sanctions years, post-sanctions period, and civil society participationTable 15.2 long description.

Figure 3

Figure 15.2 Post-sanctions duration and predicted value of civil society participation (with 95% confidence interval).

Figure 4

Figure 15.3 Post-sanctions years and predicted value of civil society participation (with 95% confidence interval).

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