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Exit from International Organizations: Costly Negotiation for Institutional Change


ISBN13: 9781009532327
To be Published: June 2025
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £26.99



Why do states exit international organizations (IOs)? How often does exit from IOs – including voluntary withdrawal and forced suspension – occur? What are the effects of leaving IOs for the exiting state? Despite the importance of membership in IOs, a broader understanding of exit across states, organizations, and time has been limited. Exit from International Organizations addresses these lacunae through a theoretically grounded and empirically systematic study of IO exit. Von Borzyskowski and Vabulas argue that there is a common logic to IO exit which helps explain both its causes and consequences. By examining IO exit across 198 states, 534 IOs, and over a hundred years of history, they show that exit is driven by states' dissatisfaction, preference divergence, and is a strategy to negotiate institutional change. The book also demonstrates that exit is costly because it has reputational consequences for leaving states and significantly affects other forms of international cooperation.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
Acknowledgements

Part I. Introduction and Theory:
1. The common logic of IO exits
2. Exit as a costly strategy to negotiate change

Part II. Withdrawal:
3. Predictors of withdrawal: when and why do states withdraw from IOs?
4. The consequences of IO withdrawal for exiting states
5. Case studies: three withdrawals

Part III. Suspension:
6. Predictors of suspension: when and why do states get suspended from IOs?
7. The consequences of IO suspension for exiting states
8. Case studies: three suspensions

Part IV. Conclusion:
9. Revisiting exit from IOs

References
Data appendix