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<RECORD>
	<REFERENCE_TYPE>31</REFERENCE_TYPE>
	<AUTHORS>
		<AUTHOR>Fearon, James D.</AUTHOR>
	</AUTHORS>
	<YEAR>1997</YEAR>
	<TITLE>Signaling Foreign Policy Interests: Tying Hands versus Sinking Costs</TITLE>
	<SECONDARY_TITLE>The Journal of Conflict Resolution</SECONDARY_TITLE>
	<PUBLISHER>Sage Publications, Inc.</PUBLISHER>
	<VOLUME>41</VOLUME>
	<PAGES>68--90</PAGES>
	<DATE>feb</DATE>
	<ABSTRACT>The author distinguishes between two types of costly signals that
	state leaders might employ in trying to credibly communicate their
	foreign policy interests to other states, whether in the realm of
	grand strategy or crisis diplomacy. Leaders might either (a) tie
	hands by creating audience costs that they will suffer ex post if
	they do not follow through on their threat or commitment (i.e.,
	costs arising from the actions of domestic political audiences)
	or (b) sink costs by taking actions such as mobilizing troops that
	are financially costly ex ante. Analysis of a game model depicting
	the essentials of each case yields two principal results. First,
	in the games' equilibria, leaders never bluff with either type of
	signal; they do not incur or create costs and then fail to respond
	if challenged. Second, leaders do better on average by tying hands,
	despite the fact that the ability to do so creates a greater ex
	ante risk of war than does the use of sunk-cost signals. These results
	and the logic behind them may help explain some empirical features
	of international signaling, such as many crises' appearance as competitions
	in creating domestic political audience costs. They also generate
	empirical puzzles, such as why the seemingly plausible logic of
	inference that undermines bluffing in the model does not operate
	in all empirical cases.</ABSTRACT>
	<URL>http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-0027%28199702%2941%3A1%3C68%3ASFPITH%3E2.0.CO%3B2-D</URL>
</RECORD>
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