{"id":13587992,"identifier":"DVN/6GRHDT","persistentUrl":"https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/6GRHDT","protocol":"doi","authority":"10.7910","separator":"/","publisher":"Harvard Dataverse","publicationDate":"2026-03-04","storageIdentifier":"s3://10.7910/DVN/6GRHDT","datasetType":"dataset","datasetVersion":{"id":720937,"datasetId":13587992,"datasetPersistentId":"doi:10.7910/DVN/6GRHDT","datasetType":"dataset","storageIdentifier":"s3://10.7910/DVN/6GRHDT","versionNumber":1,"internalVersionNumber":5,"versionMinorNumber":0,"versionState":"RELEASED","latestVersionPublishingState":"RELEASED","lastUpdateTime":"2026-03-04T16:37:57Z","releaseTime":"2026-03-04T16:37:57Z","createTime":"2026-03-04T16:37:12Z","publicationDate":"2026-03-04","citationDate":"2026-03-04","license":{"name":"CC0 1.0","uri":"http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0","iconUri":"https://licensebuttons.net/p/zero/1.0/88x31.png","rightsIdentifier":"CC0-1.0","rightsIdentifierScheme":"SPDX","schemeUri":"https://spdx.org/licenses/","languageCode":"en"},"fileAccessRequest":true,"metadataBlocks":{"citation":{"displayName":"Citation Metadata","name":"citation","fields":[{"typeName":"title","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Replication Data for: Preserve, Pressure, Protect, and Peel: The US–China Rivalry and the Politics of Vaccine Provision"},{"typeName":"author","multiple":true,"typeClass":"compound","value":[{"authorName":{"typeName":"authorName","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Inouye, Rikio"},"authorAffiliation":{"typeName":"authorAffiliation","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"https://ror.org/00hx57361","expandedvalue":{"scheme":"http://www.grid.ac/ontology/","termName":"Princeton University","@type":"https://schema.org/Organization"}},"authorIdentifierScheme":{"typeName":"authorIdentifierScheme","multiple":false,"typeClass":"controlledVocabulary","value":"ORCID"},"authorIdentifier":{"typeName":"authorIdentifier","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8512-0164","expandedvalue":{"personName":"Inouye, Rikio","@id":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8512-0164","scheme":"ORCID","@type":"https://schema.org/Person"}}}]},{"typeName":"datasetContact","multiple":true,"typeClass":"compound","value":[{"datasetContactName":{"typeName":"datasetContactName","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Inouye, Rikio"},"datasetContactAffiliation":{"typeName":"datasetContactAffiliation","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Princeton University, USA"},"datasetContactEmail":{"typeName":"datasetContactEmail","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"rinouye@princeton.edu"}}]},{"typeName":"dsDescription","multiple":true,"typeClass":"compound","value":[{"dsDescriptionValue":{"typeName":"dsDescriptionValue","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Lead states compete for influence and followers, and the COVID-19 pandemic served as an important reminder that health aid can be a foreign policy tool. How and to which countries do states distribute aid amidst a global crisis and great power rivalry? This article integrates multiple literatures and presents a novel typology of strategies: preserving existing partnerships, pressuring opponents, protecting recipients based on need, and peeling off countries from geopolitical rivals. It analyzes how the US and China distributed life-saving COVID-19 vaccines through 2021-2022. Regression results and Bayesian reasoning of original elite interviews suggest the US approach is characterized by protecting and peeling, while patterns of Chinese distribution suggest a combination of pressuring, preserving, and protecting. Case studies of Paraguay and Nicaragua – historic allies of Taiwan - further support these conclusions. This raises questions regarding the circumstances under which aid provision is instrumental and how rivals compete during global crises."}}]},{"typeName":"subject","multiple":true,"typeClass":"controlledVocabulary","value":["Social Sciences"]},{"typeName":"publication","multiple":true,"typeClass":"compound","value":[{"publicationCitation":{"typeName":"publicationCitation","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"Rikio Inouye, Preserve, Pressure, Protect, and Peel: The US–China Rivalry and the Politics of Vaccine Provision, International Studies Quarterly, Volume 70, Issue 1, March 2026, sqag005, https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqag005"}}]},{"typeName":"depositor","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"UB-KSU, ISQ"},{"typeName":"dateOfDeposit","multiple":false,"typeClass":"primitive","value":"2026-03-04"}]}},"files":[{"label":"Replication-2.zip","restricted":false,"version":1,"datasetVersionId":720937,"dataFile":{"id":13587993,"persistentId":"","filename":"Replication-2.zip","contentType":"application/zip","friendlyType":"ZIP Archive","filesize":7786326,"storageIdentifier":"s3://dvn-cloud:19cb9b65287-6820852e4951","rootDataFileId":-1,"md5":"272a8185214b84081b2525dda8dd7cd1","checksum":{"type":"MD5","value":"272a8185214b84081b2525dda8dd7cd1"},"tabularData":false,"creationDate":"2026-03-04","publicationDate":"2026-03-04","lastUpdateTime":"2026-03-04T16:37:57Z","fileAccessRequest":true}}],"citation":"Inouye, Rikio, 2026, \"Replication Data for: Preserve, Pressure, Protect, and Peel: The US–China Rivalry and the Politics of Vaccine Provision\", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/6GRHDT, Harvard Dataverse, V1"}}