Foreign aid remains a crucial policy tool of donor countries, and many countries throughout the world have been or continue to be recipients of aid. In this two-volume set, Professor Milner and Professor Tingley bring together the key published articles from a variety of disciplines which explore and elucidate the geopolitics of foreign aid. The volumes investigate the motivations for giving aid, the politics surrounding aid for donors and recipients, the role of international institutions and military aid. With a comprehensive and authoritative introduction by the editors, this title will be a valuable reference for scholars and policy-makers in many fields who wish to better understand this significant feature of modern geopolitics.
Contents: Volume I: Acknowledgements Introduction Helen V. Milner and Dustin H. Tingley PART I AID AS FOREIGN POLICY STRATEGY 1. Hans Morgenthau (1962), 'A Political Theory of Foreign Aid' 2. Thomas C. Schelling (1955), 'American Foreign Assistance' 3. David A. Baldwin (1969), 'Foreign Aid, Intervention, and Influence' 4. Eileen M. Crumm (1995), 'The Value of Economic Incentives in International Politics' 5. Hans W. Singer ([1964] 2007), 'International Aid for Economic Development: Problems and Tendencies' 6. Paul Mosley (1985), 'The Political Economy of Foreign Aid: A Model of the Market for a Public Good' 7. Scott Jackson (1979), 'Prologue to the Marshall Plan: The Origins of the American Commitment for a European Recovery Program' 8. Edwin A. Sexton and Terence N. Decker (1992), 'U.S. Foreign Aid: Is it for Friends, Development or Politics?' 9. Brian Lai (2003), 'Examining the Goals of US Foreign Assistance in the Post-Cold War Period, 1991 - 96' 10. Anne Boschini and Anders Olofsgard (2007), 'Foreign Aid: An Instrument for Fighting Communism? 11. Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith (2007), 'Foreign Aid and Policy Concessions' 12. Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith (2009), 'A Political Economy of Aid' 13. Miroslav Nincic (2010), 'Getting What You Want: Positive Inducements in International Relations' PART II AID AND DONORS 14. R.D. McKinlay and R. Little (1978), 'A Foreign-Policy Model of the Distribution of British Bilateral Aid, 1960 - 70' 15. James Meernik, Eric L. Krueger and Steven C. Poe (1998), 'Testing Models of U.S. Foreign Policy: Foreign Aid during and after the Cold War' 16. Richard Ball and Christopher Johnson (1996), 'Political, Economic, and Humanitarian Motivations for PL 480 Food Aid: Evidence from Africa' 17. Jean-Philippe Therien and Alain Noel (2000), 'Political Parties and Foreign Aid' 18. Robert K. Fleck and Christopher Kilby (2001), 'Foreign Aid and Domestic Politics: Voting in Congress and the Allocation of USAID Contracts across Congressional Districts' 19. Robert K. Fleck and Christopher Kilby (2010), 'Changing Aid Regimes? U.S. Foreign Aid from the Cold War to the War on Terror' 20. Joshua William Busby (2007), 'Bono Made Jesse Helms Cry: Jubilee 2000, Debt Relief, and Moral Action in International Politics' 21. Dustin Tingley (2010), 'Donors and Domestic Politics: Political Influences on Foreign Aid Effort' 22. David H. Bearce and Daniel C. Tirone (2010), 'Foreign Aid Effectiveness and the Strategic Goals of Donor Governments' 23. Helen V. Milner and Dustin H. Tingley (2011), 'Who Supports Global Economic Engagement? The Sources of Preferences in American Foreign Economic Policy' 24. Martin C. Steinwand (2011), 'Estimating Free-Riding Behavior: The StratAM Model' 25. Leonard Dudley and Claude Montmarquette (1976), 'A Model of the Supply of Bilateral Foreign Aid' Volume II: Acknowledgements An introduction to both volumes by the editor appears in Volume I PART I AID AND RECIPIENTS 1. Craig Burnside and David Dollar (2000), 'Aid, Policies and Growth' 2. Alberto Alesina and David Dollar (2000), 'Who Gives Foreign Aid to Whom and Why?' 3. Paul Collier and David Dollar (2000), 'Does Africa Need a Marshall Plan?' 4. Paul Collier and David Dollar (2002), 'Aid Allocation and Poverty Reduction' 5. Thad Dunning (2004), 'Conditioning the Effects of Aid: Cold War Politics, Donor Credibility, and Democracy in Africa' 6. Stephen Knack (2004), 'Does Foreign Aid Promote Democracy?' 7. Paul Collier and Anke Hoeffler (2004), 'Aid, Policy and Growth in Post-Conflict Societies' 8. Jean-Claude Berthelemy and Ariane Tichit (2004), 'Bilateral Donors' Aid Allocation Decisions - A Three-Dimensional Panel Analysis' 9. Paul Collier and David Dollar (2004), 'Development Effectiveness: What Have We Learnt?' 10. Kevin M. Morrison (2009), 'Oil, Nontax Revenue, and the Redistributional Foundations of Regime Stability' 11. Sarah Blodgett Bermeo (2011), 'Foreign Aid and Regime Change: A Role for D