Description
Exit from International Organizations explores the underexamined phenomenon of states withdrawing from international institutions. Rather than treating exit as a rare occurrence, Borzyskowski and Vabulas demonstrate that exit is a strategic tool states use to signal dissatisfaction and negotiate institutional reform.
The book provides a comprehensive framework for understanding when and why countries exit international organizations, examining case studies across various institutional contexts. The authors argue that exit negotiations involve significant costs and leverage dynamics that shape both the exit process and the organization’s subsequent evolution.
By analyzing exit as a negotiation process rather than a simple departure, this work contributes important insights to international relations scholarship on institutional design, state behavior, and organizational change. It offers valuable perspectives for policymakers, scholars, and anyone interested in understanding how international institutions adapt and persist.







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