BUIR logo
Communities & Collections
All of BUIR
  • English
  • Türkçe
Log In
Please note that log in via username/password is only available to Repository staff.
Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Subject

Browsing by Subject "Chain-ganging"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Loading...
    Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    How to entrap your protector: reassessing entrapment in light of the Crimean War crisis
    (Cambridge University Press, 2024-11-27) Onea, Tudor Andrei
    Recent scholarship often dismisses entrapment, arguing that there are hardly any identifiable cases; and that powerful states (protectors) can sidestep it by narrowing the treaty conditions under which they have to intervene to defend their weaker allies (protégés). Consequently, alliances and partnerships are nearly always considered risk-free assets. However, this paper argues that several types of entrapment are present. The paper is foremost concerned with classic entrapment, a type referring to a purposeful effort by the protégé to drag the protector into a conflict serving primarily the protégé’s interests. The protégé entraps the protector by placing itself deliberately in danger of defeat and by manipulating the protector’s domestic audience costs. Classic entrapment is likely to succeed under two conditions: (a) when the protégé’s allegiance confers the protector an advantage in a competition against other powerful states; and (b) in informal arrangements, in which there is no clear cut-off point to the protector’s commitment. The paper provides an illustration in the Ottoman Empire’s entrapment of Britain in the crisis preceding the Crimean War. The conclusion considers classic entrapment’s feasibility in present world politics, particularly in the context of Taiwan.

About the University

  • Academics
  • Research
  • Library
  • Students
  • Stars
  • Moodle
  • WebMail

Using the Library

  • Collections overview
  • Borrow, renew, return
  • Connect from off campus
  • Interlibrary loan
  • Hours
  • Plan
  • Intranet (Staff Only)

Research Tools

  • EndNote
  • Grammarly
  • iThenticate
  • Mango Languages
  • Mendeley
  • Turnitin
  • Show more ..

Contact

  • Bilkent University
  • Main Campus Library
  • Phone: +90(312) 290-1298
  • Email: dspace@bilkent.edu.tr

Bilkent University Library © 2015-2025 BUIR

  • Privacy policy
  • Send Feedback