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Judith G. Kelley is the Kevin D. Gorter Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at Duke University, North Carolina, as well as the Senior Associate Dean of the Sanford School of Public Policy. A graduate of Stanford University, California and the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Massachusetts, at Duke University she writes on how the international community can promote democracy and human rights. Her last book, Monitoring Democracy: When International Election Monitoring Works and Why it Often Fails (2012) won the Chadwick F. Alger Prize for best book about international organization and multilateralism.
Part I. Theory and Production: 1. Introduction
2. Scorecard diplomacy and reputation
3. The case of human trafficking
4. How third parties boost reputational concerns
Part II. Effects: 5. Micro-level evidence of reputational concerns
6. From reputational concerns to effects on laws, practices and norms
7. When does it work
8. Country perspectives
Conclusion. Reputation and policy
Methods appendix
Results appendix.