| The KOF Globalisation Index - revisited |
112 |
| Bureaucratic influence and administrative styles in international organizations |
11 |
| Hello, goodbye: When do states withdraw from international organizations? |
9 |
| When do states renegotiate investment agreements? The impact of arbitration |
9 |
| International demands for austerity: Examining the impact of the IMF on the public sector |
9 |
| The relational politics of shame: Evidence from the universal periodic review |
8 |
| Self-legitimation in the face of politicization: Why international organizations centralized public communication |
8 |
| Good for some, bad for others: US investors and non-trade issues in preferential trade agreements |
6 |
| Protecting labor rights in preferential trade agreements: The role of trade unions, left governments, and skilled labor |
6 |
| The rise of international parliamentary institutions: Purpose and legitimation |
5 |
| International organizations in a new era of populist nationalism |
5 |
| Divulging data: Domestic determinants of international information sharing |
5 |
| Why national parliamentarians join international organizations |
4 |
| Popular non-support for international organizations: How extensive and what does this represent? |
4 |
| The internationalization of production and the politics of compliance in WTO disputes |
4 |
| Can human rights conditionality reduce repression? Examining the European Union's economic agreements |
4 |
| Who opposes climate regulation? Business preferences for the European emission trading scheme |
4 |
| Issue linkage across international organizations: Does European countries' temporary membership in the UN Security Council increase their receipts from the EU budget? |
4 |
| Out of the shadows or into the dark? Economic openness, IMF programs, and the growth of shadow economies |
4 |
| Does international pooling of authority affect the perceived legitimacy of global governance? |
3 |
| Stability and change in international policy-making: A punctuated equilibrium approach |
3 |
| Who matters for memory: Sources of institutional memory in international organization crisis management |
3 |
| When the targets are members and donors: Analyzing inter-governmental organizations' human rights shaming |
3 |
| The proliferation of multilateral development banks |
3 |
| Who runs the international system? Nationality and leadership in the United Nations Secretariat |
3 |
| War mobilization or war destruction? The unequal rise of progressive taxation revisited |
2 |
| Collective action and geoengineering |
2 |
| Intellectual property provisions and support for US trade agreements |
2 |
| Legalization and dispute settlement benefits: The case of the GATT/WTO |
2 |
| Elite legitimation and delegitimation of international organizations in the media: Patterns and explanations |
2 |
| The elusive sources of legitimacy beliefs: Civil society views of international election observers |
2 |
| Trade at the margin: Estimating the economic implications of preferential trade agreements |
2 |
| Plaintiffs by proxy: A firm-level approach to WTO dispute resolution |
2 |
| The first image reversed: IGO signals and mass political attitudes |
1 |
| Euroscepticism and government accountability in the European Union |
1 |
| Take back control? The effects of supranational integration on party-system polarization |
1 |
| Tenure, promotion and performance: The career path of US ambassadors |
1 |
| Do IMF programs catalyze donor assistance to low-income countries? |
1 |
| When do authoritarian rulers educate: Trade competition and human capital investment in Non-Democracies |
1 |
| Taxing fragmented aid to improve aid efficiency |
0 |
| Global value chains and the political economy of WTO disputes |
0 |
| The service economy: US trade coalitions in an era of deindustrialization |
0 |
| Domestic political determinants of the onset of WTO disputes |
0 |
| Guilty as perceived: How opinions about states influence opinions about NGOs |
0 |