Abstract:
This thesis examines how multinational corporations (MNCs), acting primarily on their
own initiative, can condition state sovereignty through coordinated withdrawal. Using a
qualitative single-case study of Russia from February 2022 to mid-2025, it traces how
audience pressure, reputational concerns, and control over capabilities turned corporate
decisions into political constraints. The analysis draws on triangulated secondary
sources, including the Kyiv School of Economics “Leave Russia” database, Yale CELI
firm-level timelines, company filings synthesized by major newswires, and Russian
official documentation. Process tracing focuses on four steps: audience activation,
corporate exit, capability denial, and host-state countermeasures. The evidence indicates
that many early departures happened without legal compulsion and were concentrated in
activities that depend on proprietary standards and after‑sales support that are hard to
replace. Underperformance after ownership transfers, together with a smaller tax base
from foreign firms, points to effects that are likely to persist. Politically, the Russian state
relied on discretionary instruments, including approval regimes, mandatory discounts
and exit contributions, and temporary administration or seizure, which preserved shortterm control deepening dependence on a narrower set of non-Western partners. Interpreted through constructivism, complex interdependence, and private authority, the
case demonstrates how norms violations and private choices narrow a state’s feasible
policy set without altering juridical status. The analysis is limited by its reliance on
secondary sources and by status categories that cannot capture every nuance of firm
behavior. The study contributes a mechanism-focused account of corporate self-sanction
as emergent governance and identifies conditions under which similar dynamics are
likely to recur.