This article examines the human rights claims made by the George W. Bush Administrations of their post 9/11 foreign and security policy. Two common scholastic explanations of this narrative are evaluated: (i) that human rights constitute, at least in part, independent foreign policy goals and; (ii) that the human rights claims of policymakers can be dismissed as hypocritical rhetoric. The article informs and progresses this debate by revisiting the works of the early twentieth century political culture theorists Gabriel Almond, Graham Wallas and Edward Bernays. The article details the consistent use of a human rights narrative by administration officials as a technique of political discipline. The article identifies five linguistic mechanis...
Starting in the late 1980’s the issue of human rights abusing regimes lobbying the United States’ go...
This paper reports some preliminary findings on the relationships between United States policies tow...
The Carter Administration came to office intent on changing the traditional logic of US foreign poli...
Official US discourse claims US leadership and benevolence in promoting human rights worldwide. But ...
The promotion of human rights has faced challenges in recent years in the United States and elsewher...
My research examines how and why American presidents speak about human rights issues around the worl...
This research examines the construction in the twentieth-century United States of an ideology of hum...
The historical connection between U.S. foreign policy and human rights has been strong on occasion. ...
The news media have long been seen as playing an influential role in politics. This influence can be...
A collection of articles examines the human rights thrust of President Carter\u27s foreign policy, c...
In the immediate aftermath of the Cold War the United States seemed to move toward a more multilater...
The organizers of this symposium asked me to provide a back- ground for the present status of human ...
Contrary to the view that the rejection of human rights treaty membership has left the United States...
More than ever before, human rights rhetoric is sweeping across the landscape of world pol-itics. Th...
This paper examines the relationship between international human rights regimes and the pursuit of U...
Starting in the late 1980’s the issue of human rights abusing regimes lobbying the United States’ go...
This paper reports some preliminary findings on the relationships between United States policies tow...
The Carter Administration came to office intent on changing the traditional logic of US foreign poli...
Official US discourse claims US leadership and benevolence in promoting human rights worldwide. But ...
The promotion of human rights has faced challenges in recent years in the United States and elsewher...
My research examines how and why American presidents speak about human rights issues around the worl...
This research examines the construction in the twentieth-century United States of an ideology of hum...
The historical connection between U.S. foreign policy and human rights has been strong on occasion. ...
The news media have long been seen as playing an influential role in politics. This influence can be...
A collection of articles examines the human rights thrust of President Carter\u27s foreign policy, c...
In the immediate aftermath of the Cold War the United States seemed to move toward a more multilater...
The organizers of this symposium asked me to provide a back- ground for the present status of human ...
Contrary to the view that the rejection of human rights treaty membership has left the United States...
More than ever before, human rights rhetoric is sweeping across the landscape of world pol-itics. Th...
This paper examines the relationship between international human rights regimes and the pursuit of U...
Starting in the late 1980’s the issue of human rights abusing regimes lobbying the United States’ go...
This paper reports some preliminary findings on the relationships between United States policies tow...
The Carter Administration came to office intent on changing the traditional logic of US foreign poli...