Ryan Goodman (Professor of Law, Professor of Law, New York Universi, Derek Jinks (Professor of Law, Professor of Law, University of Texa
Socializing States
Promoting Human Rights Through International Law
Ryan Goodman (Professor of Law, Professor of Law, New York Universi, Derek Jinks (Professor of Law, Professor of Law, University of Texa
Socializing States
Promoting Human Rights Through International Law
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This book argues for a greater specification of how international law influences relevant actors to improve human rights. It argues that states are influenced via general social processes such as cultural contagion, identification, and mimicry. These processes occasion a rethinking of fundamental regime design problems in human rights law.
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This book argues for a greater specification of how international law influences relevant actors to improve human rights. It argues that states are influenced via general social processes such as cultural contagion, identification, and mimicry. These processes occasion a rethinking of fundamental regime design problems in human rights law.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 252
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 406g
- ISBN-13: 9780199301003
- ISBN-10: 019930100X
- Artikelnr.: 38049668
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 252
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 406g
- ISBN-13: 9780199301003
- ISBN-10: 019930100X
- Artikelnr.: 38049668
RG: Professor of Law, New York University DJ: Professor of Law, University of Texas
* Table of Contents
* Chapter 1. Introduction: Rethinking State Socialization and
International Human Rights Law
* A. The Empirical Study of International Law
* B. Objectives of the Project
* C. Theorizing State Socialization
* D. Advancing the Understanding of State Socialization
* E. Outline of the Book
* PART I. A THEORY OF INFLUENCE
* Chapter 2. Three Mechanisms of Social Influence
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* 1. Acculturation as Incomplete Internalization: Distinguishing
Persuasion
* 2. Acculturation as Social Sanctions and Rewards: Distinguishing
Material Inducement
* D. Illustration: Mechanisms of Influence in The Global Diffusion of
Markets and Democracy
* Chapter 3. Acculturation of States: The Theoretical Model
* A. Socialization of the State
* B. Acculturation and the Patterns of State Practice
* 1. Isomorphism across states
* 2. Decoupling within states
* 3. Global integration correlation
* 4. Social networks correlation
* 5. Institutionalization correlation
* 6. Contagion effects: adoption by other states is a predictor of
subsequent adoption
* 7. Lack of correlation with geopolitical vulnerability or with
powerful states' interests
* 8. Discerning the Process of Micro-Acculturation: Qualitative
analysis and case studies
* Chapter 4. Acculturation of States: The Empirical Record
* A. Studies Outside of Human Rights
* 1. Environmental policy and public education
* 2. Network effects
* B. Human rights studies
* 1. Constitutional design
* 2. Substantive rights protections: Children's rights and women's
rights
* 3. Network effects and human rights
* 4. Regional/ "neighborhood " effects: Simmons' Mobilizing for Human
Rights
* C. Objections and Clarifications
* 1. Does our account assume acculturation spreads desirable laws and
policies?
* 2. Could material inducements provide an equally plausible
explanation of the observed behavior?
* 3. Is global-level acculturation driven by hegemonic interests?
* PART II. APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME DESIGN
* Chapter 5. Conditional Membership: Socialization and the Community
Delimitation
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 6. Precision of Legal Obligations: Socialization and
Rule-making
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 7. Monitoring and Enforcement: Socialization and
Rule-breakers
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* PART III. PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF STATE SOCIALIZATION
* Chapter 8. State Acculturation and the Problem of Compliance
* A. Acculturation without Decoupling
* B. Acculturation with "Benign " or "Facilitative " Decoupling
* C. Decoupling and "Deep " Reform
* D. Moving beyond Decoupling: The progression of acculturation
* 1. Domestic political opportunity structure
* 2. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " I: External audience effects
* 3. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " II: Internal "audience "
effects
* 4. Escalating demands by global civil society
* 5. Evolutionary state learning
* 6. The causal dispensability of domestic civil society/NGOs
* E. Managing Decoupling: Designing institutions to reduce the gap
* Chapter 9. Toward an Integrated Model of State Socialization
* A. Taking Acculturation Seriously
* B. Negative Interactions between Mechanisms
* 1. Conveyance of prevalence information
* 2. Overjustification and social signaling
* 3. Overjustification and self-perception
* 4. Overjustification and self-determination
* 5. "A fine is a price "
* C. Sequencing Effects
* D. Conditions for Mechanism Success
* 1. Targeting Capacity and Target Actor Characteristics
* 2. Influence agent characteristics
* Chapter 10. Conclusion: Taking Stock and Future Research
* A. Our Major Empirical Claims
* B. Our Major Normative Applications
* C. Future Normative Work
* D. Future Empirical Work
* Chapter 1. Introduction: Rethinking State Socialization and
International Human Rights Law
* A. The Empirical Study of International Law
* B. Objectives of the Project
* C. Theorizing State Socialization
* D. Advancing the Understanding of State Socialization
* E. Outline of the Book
* PART I. A THEORY OF INFLUENCE
* Chapter 2. Three Mechanisms of Social Influence
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* 1. Acculturation as Incomplete Internalization: Distinguishing
Persuasion
* 2. Acculturation as Social Sanctions and Rewards: Distinguishing
Material Inducement
* D. Illustration: Mechanisms of Influence in The Global Diffusion of
Markets and Democracy
* Chapter 3. Acculturation of States: The Theoretical Model
* A. Socialization of the State
* B. Acculturation and the Patterns of State Practice
* 1. Isomorphism across states
* 2. Decoupling within states
* 3. Global integration correlation
* 4. Social networks correlation
* 5. Institutionalization correlation
* 6. Contagion effects: adoption by other states is a predictor of
subsequent adoption
* 7. Lack of correlation with geopolitical vulnerability or with
powerful states' interests
* 8. Discerning the Process of Micro-Acculturation: Qualitative
analysis and case studies
* Chapter 4. Acculturation of States: The Empirical Record
* A. Studies Outside of Human Rights
* 1. Environmental policy and public education
* 2. Network effects
* B. Human rights studies
* 1. Constitutional design
* 2. Substantive rights protections: Children's rights and women's
rights
* 3. Network effects and human rights
* 4. Regional/ "neighborhood " effects: Simmons' Mobilizing for Human
Rights
* C. Objections and Clarifications
* 1. Does our account assume acculturation spreads desirable laws and
policies?
* 2. Could material inducements provide an equally plausible
explanation of the observed behavior?
* 3. Is global-level acculturation driven by hegemonic interests?
* PART II. APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME DESIGN
* Chapter 5. Conditional Membership: Socialization and the Community
Delimitation
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 6. Precision of Legal Obligations: Socialization and
Rule-making
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 7. Monitoring and Enforcement: Socialization and
Rule-breakers
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* PART III. PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF STATE SOCIALIZATION
* Chapter 8. State Acculturation and the Problem of Compliance
* A. Acculturation without Decoupling
* B. Acculturation with "Benign " or "Facilitative " Decoupling
* C. Decoupling and "Deep " Reform
* D. Moving beyond Decoupling: The progression of acculturation
* 1. Domestic political opportunity structure
* 2. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " I: External audience effects
* 3. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " II: Internal "audience "
effects
* 4. Escalating demands by global civil society
* 5. Evolutionary state learning
* 6. The causal dispensability of domestic civil society/NGOs
* E. Managing Decoupling: Designing institutions to reduce the gap
* Chapter 9. Toward an Integrated Model of State Socialization
* A. Taking Acculturation Seriously
* B. Negative Interactions between Mechanisms
* 1. Conveyance of prevalence information
* 2. Overjustification and social signaling
* 3. Overjustification and self-perception
* 4. Overjustification and self-determination
* 5. "A fine is a price "
* C. Sequencing Effects
* D. Conditions for Mechanism Success
* 1. Targeting Capacity and Target Actor Characteristics
* 2. Influence agent characteristics
* Chapter 10. Conclusion: Taking Stock and Future Research
* A. Our Major Empirical Claims
* B. Our Major Normative Applications
* C. Future Normative Work
* D. Future Empirical Work
* Table of Contents
* Chapter 1. Introduction: Rethinking State Socialization and
International Human Rights Law
* A. The Empirical Study of International Law
* B. Objectives of the Project
* C. Theorizing State Socialization
* D. Advancing the Understanding of State Socialization
* E. Outline of the Book
* PART I. A THEORY OF INFLUENCE
* Chapter 2. Three Mechanisms of Social Influence
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* 1. Acculturation as Incomplete Internalization: Distinguishing
Persuasion
* 2. Acculturation as Social Sanctions and Rewards: Distinguishing
Material Inducement
* D. Illustration: Mechanisms of Influence in The Global Diffusion of
Markets and Democracy
* Chapter 3. Acculturation of States: The Theoretical Model
* A. Socialization of the State
* B. Acculturation and the Patterns of State Practice
* 1. Isomorphism across states
* 2. Decoupling within states
* 3. Global integration correlation
* 4. Social networks correlation
* 5. Institutionalization correlation
* 6. Contagion effects: adoption by other states is a predictor of
subsequent adoption
* 7. Lack of correlation with geopolitical vulnerability or with
powerful states' interests
* 8. Discerning the Process of Micro-Acculturation: Qualitative
analysis and case studies
* Chapter 4. Acculturation of States: The Empirical Record
* A. Studies Outside of Human Rights
* 1. Environmental policy and public education
* 2. Network effects
* B. Human rights studies
* 1. Constitutional design
* 2. Substantive rights protections: Children's rights and women's
rights
* 3. Network effects and human rights
* 4. Regional/ "neighborhood " effects: Simmons' Mobilizing for Human
Rights
* C. Objections and Clarifications
* 1. Does our account assume acculturation spreads desirable laws and
policies?
* 2. Could material inducements provide an equally plausible
explanation of the observed behavior?
* 3. Is global-level acculturation driven by hegemonic interests?
* PART II. APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME DESIGN
* Chapter 5. Conditional Membership: Socialization and the Community
Delimitation
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 6. Precision of Legal Obligations: Socialization and
Rule-making
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 7. Monitoring and Enforcement: Socialization and
Rule-breakers
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* PART III. PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF STATE SOCIALIZATION
* Chapter 8. State Acculturation and the Problem of Compliance
* A. Acculturation without Decoupling
* B. Acculturation with "Benign " or "Facilitative " Decoupling
* C. Decoupling and "Deep " Reform
* D. Moving beyond Decoupling: The progression of acculturation
* 1. Domestic political opportunity structure
* 2. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " I: External audience effects
* 3. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " II: Internal "audience "
effects
* 4. Escalating demands by global civil society
* 5. Evolutionary state learning
* 6. The causal dispensability of domestic civil society/NGOs
* E. Managing Decoupling: Designing institutions to reduce the gap
* Chapter 9. Toward an Integrated Model of State Socialization
* A. Taking Acculturation Seriously
* B. Negative Interactions between Mechanisms
* 1. Conveyance of prevalence information
* 2. Overjustification and social signaling
* 3. Overjustification and self-perception
* 4. Overjustification and self-determination
* 5. "A fine is a price "
* C. Sequencing Effects
* D. Conditions for Mechanism Success
* 1. Targeting Capacity and Target Actor Characteristics
* 2. Influence agent characteristics
* Chapter 10. Conclusion: Taking Stock and Future Research
* A. Our Major Empirical Claims
* B. Our Major Normative Applications
* C. Future Normative Work
* D. Future Empirical Work
* Chapter 1. Introduction: Rethinking State Socialization and
International Human Rights Law
* A. The Empirical Study of International Law
* B. Objectives of the Project
* C. Theorizing State Socialization
* D. Advancing the Understanding of State Socialization
* E. Outline of the Book
* PART I. A THEORY OF INFLUENCE
* Chapter 2. Three Mechanisms of Social Influence
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* 1. Acculturation as Incomplete Internalization: Distinguishing
Persuasion
* 2. Acculturation as Social Sanctions and Rewards: Distinguishing
Material Inducement
* D. Illustration: Mechanisms of Influence in The Global Diffusion of
Markets and Democracy
* Chapter 3. Acculturation of States: The Theoretical Model
* A. Socialization of the State
* B. Acculturation and the Patterns of State Practice
* 1. Isomorphism across states
* 2. Decoupling within states
* 3. Global integration correlation
* 4. Social networks correlation
* 5. Institutionalization correlation
* 6. Contagion effects: adoption by other states is a predictor of
subsequent adoption
* 7. Lack of correlation with geopolitical vulnerability or with
powerful states' interests
* 8. Discerning the Process of Micro-Acculturation: Qualitative
analysis and case studies
* Chapter 4. Acculturation of States: The Empirical Record
* A. Studies Outside of Human Rights
* 1. Environmental policy and public education
* 2. Network effects
* B. Human rights studies
* 1. Constitutional design
* 2. Substantive rights protections: Children's rights and women's
rights
* 3. Network effects and human rights
* 4. Regional/ "neighborhood " effects: Simmons' Mobilizing for Human
Rights
* C. Objections and Clarifications
* 1. Does our account assume acculturation spreads desirable laws and
policies?
* 2. Could material inducements provide an equally plausible
explanation of the observed behavior?
* 3. Is global-level acculturation driven by hegemonic interests?
* PART II. APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME DESIGN
* Chapter 5. Conditional Membership: Socialization and the Community
Delimitation
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 6. Precision of Legal Obligations: Socialization and
Rule-making
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* Chapter 7. Monitoring and Enforcement: Socialization and
Rule-breakers
* A. Material inducement
* B. Persuasion
* C. Acculturation
* PART III. PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF STATE SOCIALIZATION
* Chapter 8. State Acculturation and the Problem of Compliance
* A. Acculturation without Decoupling
* B. Acculturation with "Benign " or "Facilitative " Decoupling
* C. Decoupling and "Deep " Reform
* D. Moving beyond Decoupling: The progression of acculturation
* 1. Domestic political opportunity structure
* 2. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " I: External audience effects
* 3. The "civilizing force of hypocrisy " II: Internal "audience "
effects
* 4. Escalating demands by global civil society
* 5. Evolutionary state learning
* 6. The causal dispensability of domestic civil society/NGOs
* E. Managing Decoupling: Designing institutions to reduce the gap
* Chapter 9. Toward an Integrated Model of State Socialization
* A. Taking Acculturation Seriously
* B. Negative Interactions between Mechanisms
* 1. Conveyance of prevalence information
* 2. Overjustification and social signaling
* 3. Overjustification and self-perception
* 4. Overjustification and self-determination
* 5. "A fine is a price "
* C. Sequencing Effects
* D. Conditions for Mechanism Success
* 1. Targeting Capacity and Target Actor Characteristics
* 2. Influence agent characteristics
* Chapter 10. Conclusion: Taking Stock and Future Research
* A. Our Major Empirical Claims
* B. Our Major Normative Applications
* C. Future Normative Work
* D. Future Empirical Work