BOOKS
HOW SANCTIONS WORK

Sanctions have enormous consequences. Especially when imposed by a country with the economic influence of the United States, sanctions induce clear shockwaves in both the economy and political culture of the targeted state, and in the everyday lives of citizens. But do economic sanctions induce the behavioral changes intended? Do sanctions work in the way they should?
To answer these questions, the authors of How Sanctions Work highlight Iran, the most sanctioned country in the world. Comprehensive sanctions are meant to induce uprisings or pressures to change the behavior of the ruling establishment, or to weaken its hold on power. But, after four decades, the case of Iran shows the opposite to be true: sanctions strengthened the Iranian state, impoverished its population, increased state repression, and escalated Iran's military posture toward the U.S. and its allies in the region. Instead of offering an 'alternative to war,' sanctions have become a cause of war. Consequently, How Sanctions Work reveals how necessary it is to understand how sanctions really work.
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What People Are Saying
“There is no shortage of publications on the Iran sanctions, but it is rare to see such detailed, serious work on this topic by highly knowledgeable scholars. How sanctions work introduces a wealth of information and perspectives not generally found in the existing western academic literature.”
“A vital study of the most tragic case in the recent history of economic sanctions. Bajoghli, Nasr, Salehi-Isfahani, and Vaez powerfully demonstrate how large the gap between the severe material effects and the limited political efficacy of sanctions against Iran has grown.”
Sanctions’ impacts in Iran, when sanctions work, opens a window into the fraught, little-understood, but ubiquitous and hugely consequential practice that seems to have supplanted diplomacy in current foreign policy and international relations. This volume shifts our understandings of what sanctions do—in Iran and beyond.”
Meet the Authors

NARGES BAJOGHLI
Anthropologist and Assistant Professor of Middle East Studies at the Johns Hopkins SAIS

VALI NASR
Professor of International Affairs and Middle East Studies at the Johns Hopkins SAIS

DJAVAD SALEHI-ISFAHANI
Professor of Economics at Virginia Tech

ALI VAEZ
Director of the International Crisis Group Iran Project



