Replication Data for: Credibility in Crises: How Patrons Reassure Their Allies

Sukin, L.ORCID logo & Lanoszka, A. (2024). Replication Data for: Credibility in Crises: How Patrons Reassure Their Allies. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/nan9kr
Copy

How do citizens of US allies assess different reassurance strategies? This article investigates the effects of US reassurance policies on public opinion in allied states. We design and conduct a survey experiment in five Central–Eastern European states—Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Romania—in March 2022. Set against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, this experiment asked respondents to evaluate four types of reassurance strategies, each a critical tool in US crisis response policy: military deployments, diplomatic summitry, economic sanctions, and public reaffirmations of security guarantees. The international security literature typically values capabilities for their deterrence and reassurance benefits, while largely dismissing public reaffirmations as “cheap talk” and economic sanctions as being ineffective. Yet we find preferences for the use of economic sanctions and public statements as reassurance strategies during crises, in part because these approaches help states manage escalation risks.

Available at: 10.7910/dvn/nan9kr

Access level: Open

Licence: CC0 1.0


Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export

Downloads