Respect for human rights represents self-imposed restraints on the behavior of a government. These limits signify both a domestic norm and a state that has decided to settle political disputes through nonviolent methods. When these governments interact in the international system, we suspect that their basic norms of behavior will remain and generate relatively peaceful interactions. We test this contention on pairs of all states from 1980 to 2001 and find that joint respect for human rights decreases the probability of conflict. This relationship is maintained even when one controls for the effect of democracy and its influence on the human rights record of states
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights t...
We present an interdisciplinary theory that considers how loss of membership in inter- national orga...
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...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
International human rights treaties have been ratified by many nation-states, including those ruled ...
What mechanisms facilitate state compliance with human rights? This article proposes and applies a m...
This study examines a government's decision to cede authority over fundamental questions of policy t...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
According to indicators of political repression currently used by scholars, human rights practices h...
Whether international human rights treaties constrain the behavior of governments is a hotly contes...
This is the replication files for the APSR article: Are Human Rights Practices Improving? Abstrac...
The normative transfer thesis posits that systematic discrimination, inequality, and repression are ...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights t...
We present an interdisciplinary theory that considers how loss of membership in inter- national orga...
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...
Research on international human rights law suggests that the beneficial effects of treaties depend o...
International human rights treaties have been ratified by many nation-states, including those ruled ...
What mechanisms facilitate state compliance with human rights? This article proposes and applies a m...
This study examines a government's decision to cede authority over fundamental questions of policy t...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
According to indicators of political repression currently used by scholars, human rights practices h...
Whether international human rights treaties constrain the behavior of governments is a hotly contes...
This is the replication files for the APSR article: Are Human Rights Practices Improving? Abstrac...
The normative transfer thesis posits that systematic discrimination, inequality, and repression are ...
How human rights treaties will be incorporated and applied domestically must affect how eager states...
The legitimacy and role of reservations to international human rights treaties is a heavily contest...
Do national legislatures constitute a mechanism by which commitments to international human rights t...
We present an interdisciplinary theory that considers how loss of membership in inter- national orga...