This study tests the effectiveness of naming and shaming by transnational advocacy networks in reducing the severity of ongoing instances of genocide or politicide. I argue that naming and shaming should force perpetrators to reduce the severity of these ongoing atrocities in order to shift the spotlight, save their reputation, reframe their identity, maintain international legitimacy and domestic viability, and ease pressure placed on them by states or IOs. I test whether naming and shaming by NGOs, the media, and IOs significantly reduces the severity of the killing. Ordered logit analyses of ongoing genocides and politicides from 1976 to 2008 reveal that naming and shaming by Amnesty International, the Northern media, and the UNCHR have ...
We live at a time when journalists coin phrases like ‘‘compassion fatigue’’ to describe failures of ...
While it is generally recognized that “naming and shaming” carried out by transnational human rights...
The Genocide Convention, drafted by the United Nations soon after the Nuremberg trials, represented ...
This study tests the effectiveness of naming and shaming by transnational advocacy networks in reduc...
This Independent Study project aims to determine whether or not naming and shaming had any effect on...
Genocide can be defined as a complex process of systematic persecution and annihi- lation of a group...
The atrocities that were committed in Rwanda, Bosnia and Armenia could not have been possible withou...
This paper calls on the United States to assess where its true interests lie in evaluating genocide ...
When the United Nations commission investigating Darfur issued its report in January 2005, it conc...
For a term coined just seventy-five years ago, genocide has become a remarkably potent idea. But has...
The concept of genocide, and outspoken abhorrence for what it stands for, have arisen over the last ...
This article examines two cases of ongoing persecution in Southeast Asia and the problems of naming ...
The term ‘‘genocide’’ has been commonly used, particularly in political dialogue, to describe atroci...
Although the United Nations’ 1948 Genocide Convention was a well-intentioned step toward ending geno...
Initial representations of the Rwanda genocide in the Western media were at best inaccurate and at w...
We live at a time when journalists coin phrases like ‘‘compassion fatigue’’ to describe failures of ...
While it is generally recognized that “naming and shaming” carried out by transnational human rights...
The Genocide Convention, drafted by the United Nations soon after the Nuremberg trials, represented ...
This study tests the effectiveness of naming and shaming by transnational advocacy networks in reduc...
This Independent Study project aims to determine whether or not naming and shaming had any effect on...
Genocide can be defined as a complex process of systematic persecution and annihi- lation of a group...
The atrocities that were committed in Rwanda, Bosnia and Armenia could not have been possible withou...
This paper calls on the United States to assess where its true interests lie in evaluating genocide ...
When the United Nations commission investigating Darfur issued its report in January 2005, it conc...
For a term coined just seventy-five years ago, genocide has become a remarkably potent idea. But has...
The concept of genocide, and outspoken abhorrence for what it stands for, have arisen over the last ...
This article examines two cases of ongoing persecution in Southeast Asia and the problems of naming ...
The term ‘‘genocide’’ has been commonly used, particularly in political dialogue, to describe atroci...
Although the United Nations’ 1948 Genocide Convention was a well-intentioned step toward ending geno...
Initial representations of the Rwanda genocide in the Western media were at best inaccurate and at w...
We live at a time when journalists coin phrases like ‘‘compassion fatigue’’ to describe failures of ...
While it is generally recognized that “naming and shaming” carried out by transnational human rights...
The Genocide Convention, drafted by the United Nations soon after the Nuremberg trials, represented ...