As nationalist sentiments gain traction globally, the attitudinal and institutional foundations of the international liberal order face new challenges. One manifestation of this trend is the growing backlash against international courts. Defenders of the liberal order struggle to articulate compelling reasons for why states, and their citizens, should continue delegating authority to international institutions. This article probes the effectiveness of arguments that emphasise the appropriateness and benefits of cooperation in containing preferences for backlash among the mass public. We rely on IR theories that explain why elites create international institutions to derive three sets of arguments that could be deployed to boost support for ...
Formal international human rights regimes differ from most other forms of international cooperation ...
This dissertation asks: when do international courts promote cooperation among countries? I argue th...
In this article, I argue against the claim that the practice of the European Court of Human Rights c...
First published online: 28 May 2020As nationalist sentiments gain traction globally, the attitudinal...
How does backlash from consolidated democracies affect the behavior of liberal international institu...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
The European Court of Justice as it stands today is is one of the most influential transnational jud...
Even though the European Court of Justice has always played a significant role in European integrati...
This article offers an empirically grounded interpretivist theory of the social legitimacy of the Eu...
International Human Rights Courts (IHRCts), such as the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), have...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
Formal international human rights regimes differ from most other forms of international cooperation ...
This dissertation asks: when do international courts promote cooperation among countries? I argue th...
In this article, I argue against the claim that the practice of the European Court of Human Rights c...
First published online: 28 May 2020As nationalist sentiments gain traction globally, the attitudinal...
How does backlash from consolidated democracies affect the behavior of liberal international institu...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
The European Court of Justice as it stands today is is one of the most influential transnational jud...
Even though the European Court of Justice has always played a significant role in European integrati...
This article offers an empirically grounded interpretivist theory of the social legitimacy of the Eu...
International Human Rights Courts (IHRCts), such as the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), have...
This article highlights transnational consequences for access to justice of political posturing by n...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
This thesis seeks to explain why states comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) by de...
Formal international human rights regimes differ from most other forms of international cooperation ...
This dissertation asks: when do international courts promote cooperation among countries? I argue th...
In this article, I argue against the claim that the practice of the European Court of Human Rights c...