“…Furthermore, the continuous advance of globalization provides more opportunities and means for international sanctions (Cox & Drury, 2006). Many scholars such as Hovi et al (2005), Bapat and Morgan (2009), and Nivesjö (2013) have explored whether international sanctions actually work, while other researchers have focused on the negative impacts of international sanctions on the fields of economics, politics, energy, and social welfare of target countries (Afesorgbor & Mahadevan, 2016; Biglaiser & Lektzian, 2020; Fischhendler et al, 2017; Hu et al,2021; Jafarey & Lahiri, 2002; Lv & Xu, 2019; Neuenkirch & Neumeier, 2015; Peksen & Son, 2015; Peksen, 2016; Wang et al, 2022; Wen et al, 2021). Therefore, it is theoretically possible to link international sanctions to innovation as external international sanctions limit international exchanges, reduce trade flows, and cut technology imports from the target countries (Afesorgbor, 2019; Kim, 2013; Yang et al, 2004).…”