Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights treaties can be made credible? Treaty ratification can activate domestic mechanisms that make repression more costly, and the legislative opposition can enhance these mechanisms. Legislative veto players raise the cost of formalistic repressive strategies by declining to consent to legislation. Executives can still choose to rely on more costly, extralegal strategies, but these could result in severe penalties for the leader and require the leader to expend resources to hide. Especially in treaty member-states, legislatures can use other powers to also increase the cost of extralegal violations, which can further reduce repression. By usi...
This article analyses which factors promote or hinder ratification by nation states of the Second O...
Replication data for "Ratification as accommodation? Domestic dissent and human rights treaties.
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
Governing elites often ratify human rights treaties, even when their policies do not align with thos...
International human rights treaties have been ratified by many nation-states, including those ruled ...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
After the nonbinding Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many global and regional human rights t...
Researchers have puzzled over the finding that countries that ratify UN human rights treaties such a...
Among the explanations for state ratification of human rights treaties, few are more common and wide...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
This study examines a government's decision to cede authority over fundamental questions of policy t...
Observers often argue that international institutions can promote policy reform by serving as a comm...
How and when do commitments to international institutions affect the behavior of national government...
This article analyses which factors promote or hinder ratification by nation states of the Second O...
Replication data for "Ratification as accommodation? Domestic dissent and human rights treaties.
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
Governing elites often ratify human rights treaties, even when their policies do not align with thos...
International human rights treaties have been ratified by many nation-states, including those ruled ...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
After the nonbinding Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many global and regional human rights t...
Researchers have puzzled over the finding that countries that ratify UN human rights treaties such a...
Among the explanations for state ratification of human rights treaties, few are more common and wide...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
This study examines a government's decision to cede authority over fundamental questions of policy t...
Observers often argue that international institutions can promote policy reform by serving as a comm...
How and when do commitments to international institutions affect the behavior of national government...
This article analyses which factors promote or hinder ratification by nation states of the Second O...
Replication data for "Ratification as accommodation? Domestic dissent and human rights treaties.
Tsebelis ’ veto players theory predicts that legislative veto players constrain the executive’s poli...