"Quite simply, this is the best book on economic sanctions and American foreign policy that I have ever read. Shrewd Sanctions is a model of how to blend scholarly analysis with policy-relevant research." --David A. Baldwin, Columbia University, 1/1/2003 "Shrewd Sanctions breaks new ground in moving beyond the narrow sanctions' debate to address more pertinent concerns about thow sanctions fit into a post-cold war, post-9/11 approach to American Foreign policy." --Rhodes, Middle East, 5/1/2003 "O'Sullivan has produced a superb study of sanctions that should be required reading for UN and US policy-makers." --David Cortright, President, Forth Freedom Forum, Contemporary Security Policy, 8/1/2003 "...a superbly written investigation of the effectiveness of U.S. sanctions against Iran, Iraq, Libya, and Sudan. In each case study, O'Sullivan meticulously examines the economic and political impact of sanctions, the extent to which they achieved their policy goals, the costs borne to the United States, and the utility of sanctions relative to other alternatives, like the use of military force or diplomatic engagement." --Mark Strauss, Foreign Policy, Chronicle of Higher Education, 6/13/2003 "Shrewd Sanctions is a wise book of advice about how the United States can better integrate the use of economic sanctions into effective foreign policy...this book should still be required reading for US policy makers, including members of Congress." --Clement M. Henry, University of Texas at Austin, Middle East Journal, 9/1/2003 "... display of the positive and negative aspects of economic tools, those inducements or sanctions related to political diplomacy... The book offers, through its case studies, an important opportunity to examine the strategies and effects of sanctions in the four targeted countries from a purely political and economic, rather than a humanitarian, perspective... Her incisive dismemberment of the sanctions strategies and their potential optimal applications allows the reader to observe carefully and cogently the dynamics operating in this area of international power and drama... The reader will do well to consider her important work with due diligence and appreciation." --Dr. Shyrl Topp Matias, Punahou School, International Journal on World Peace, 9/1/2003