This article explores why governments commit to human rights enforcement by joining the International Criminal Court (ICC). Compared with other international institutions, the ICC has substantial authority and autonomy. Since governments traditionally guard their sovereignty carefully, it is puzzling that the ICC was not only established, but established so rapidly. Looking beyond traditional explanations for joining international institutions, this study identifies a new causal factor: a country's dependence network, which consists of the set of other states that control resources the country values. This study captures different dimensions of what states value through trade relations, security alliances, and shared memberships in internat...
Why do countries join international human rights institutions, when membership often yields few mate...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
Democratic and autocratic states routinely violate their international agreements protecting human r...
Abstract: Why do states commit to international human rights institutions? The commitment literatur...
The Article focuses on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the commitment of states through ICC ...
What types of countries have ratified the Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court...
States continue to abuse human rights and commit mass atrocities even though for the past several de...
The creation of an International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute war crimes poses a real puzzle. W...
The International Criminal Court is the first permanent, treaty-based international criminal court e...
In 2002, the USA asked all countries to sign agreements exempting US citizens from prosecution by th...
promote behavior that is consistent with institutional purposes. Evidence for this proposition is ba...
This article examines states ’ decisions to commit to human rights treaties. It argues that the effe...
This project examines the untapped area of international legal engagement and the dynamic ways that ...
Judicial empowerment has traditionally been explained as a response to political uncertainty. This a...
Do regimes commit to international human rights treaties? After these regimes ratify these treaties,...
Why do countries join international human rights institutions, when membership often yields few mate...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
Democratic and autocratic states routinely violate their international agreements protecting human r...
Abstract: Why do states commit to international human rights institutions? The commitment literatur...
The Article focuses on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the commitment of states through ICC ...
What types of countries have ratified the Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court...
States continue to abuse human rights and commit mass atrocities even though for the past several de...
The creation of an International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute war crimes poses a real puzzle. W...
The International Criminal Court is the first permanent, treaty-based international criminal court e...
In 2002, the USA asked all countries to sign agreements exempting US citizens from prosecution by th...
promote behavior that is consistent with institutional purposes. Evidence for this proposition is ba...
This article examines states ’ decisions to commit to human rights treaties. It argues that the effe...
This project examines the untapped area of international legal engagement and the dynamic ways that ...
Judicial empowerment has traditionally been explained as a response to political uncertainty. This a...
Do regimes commit to international human rights treaties? After these regimes ratify these treaties,...
Why do countries join international human rights institutions, when membership often yields few mate...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
Democratic and autocratic states routinely violate their international agreements protecting human r...