This article aims to enrich the literature on EU sanctions in two ways. First, it argues that the absence of material sanctions does not imply a non-response. When faced with human rights violations, policymakers enjoy a third option besides exerting material pressure or refraining from intervening. They may instead employ what constructivist scholars call social sanctions. This option consists of verbally calling out the violators, either publicly, through a naming-and-shaming strategy, or diplomatically via political dialogue and demarches. Social sanctions can be a credible alternative or complement to material sanctions. Second, we argue for the importance of disaggregating the EU as a sender of sanctions. A non-response by executive in...
In the past decades, the EU has made extensive use of targeted or "smart" sanctions to achieve its ...
Sexual minorities’ rights are increasingly included in the EU internal as well as external agenda. W...
none1noIn 2020 the European Union adopted the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime that, similarly t...
This article aims to enrich the literature on EU sanctions in two ways. First, it argues that the ab...
This article aims to enrich the literature on EU sanctions in two ways. First, it argues that the ab...
A rights-based approach to development, a cornerstone of the European Union’s (EU) development polic...
The European Union (EU) is one of the world’s most active imposers of foreign policy sanctions. By c...
The EU is committed to promoting human rights through its development policy. This article argues th...
The European Union (EU) is the world’s biggest donor of aid to developing countries. The provision o...
Although the literature is increasingly interested in the parliamentary dimension of EU foreign poli...
Existing studies suggest that normative commitments to the European Union’s human rights standards r...
This paper examines various sanctions mechanisms the EU has in place to respond to systematic and se...
The essay problematizes the incorporation of LGBTI rights promotion into the US and EU foreign polic...
The European Union (EU) states in its 2016 Global Strategy that it intends to be a "responsible glob...
In the past decades, the EU has made extensive use of targeted or "smart" sanctions to achieve its ...
Sexual minorities’ rights are increasingly included in the EU internal as well as external agenda. W...
none1noIn 2020 the European Union adopted the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime that, similarly t...
This article aims to enrich the literature on EU sanctions in two ways. First, it argues that the ab...
This article aims to enrich the literature on EU sanctions in two ways. First, it argues that the ab...
A rights-based approach to development, a cornerstone of the European Union’s (EU) development polic...
The European Union (EU) is one of the world’s most active imposers of foreign policy sanctions. By c...
The EU is committed to promoting human rights through its development policy. This article argues th...
The European Union (EU) is the world’s biggest donor of aid to developing countries. The provision o...
Although the literature is increasingly interested in the parliamentary dimension of EU foreign poli...
Existing studies suggest that normative commitments to the European Union’s human rights standards r...
This paper examines various sanctions mechanisms the EU has in place to respond to systematic and se...
The essay problematizes the incorporation of LGBTI rights promotion into the US and EU foreign polic...
The European Union (EU) states in its 2016 Global Strategy that it intends to be a "responsible glob...
In the past decades, the EU has made extensive use of targeted or "smart" sanctions to achieve its ...
Sexual minorities’ rights are increasingly included in the EU internal as well as external agenda. W...
none1noIn 2020 the European Union adopted the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime that, similarly t...