One of the most important developments in international political and legal theory over the last 15 years has been the assertion that norms affect state behavior. Scholars have claimed that states are constrained by norms of appropriate behavior and furthermore that norms actually change ("reconstitute") states' understandings of their interests, thereby leading states to adapt their behavior in accordance with these new understandings. We test the proposition that norms alter state behavior with respect to the expanding international norm against torture from 1985 through 2003. Unfortunately, we find no evidence that the spreading of the international norm against torture, measured by the percentage of countries in the world that have acce...
Abstract Does state identity play a role in why governments enter into international agreements? Giv...
The article explores the content of the prohibition of torture in constitutional and international ...
I examine why states violate norms they embrace as members of international society. The rationalist...
One of the most important developments in international political and legal theory over the last fif...
This paper addresses how the domestic violation of the anti-torture norm within the United States du...
This thesis examines the status of the legal and moral norm against torture within post-9/11 America...
This thesis examines the international norms banning torture and the death penalty, codified in the...
This study of state compliance with international norms against torture focuses on the period 1979-1...
The prohibition of torture is one of the most emblematic norms of the modern human rights movement, ...
Domestic approaches to compliance with international commitments often presume that international la...
The human rights movement has spent considerable energy developing and promoting the adoption of bot...
The human rights movement has spent considerable energy developing and promoting the adoption of bot...
The normative transfer thesis posits that systematic discrimination, inequality, and repression are ...
Prohibition of torture in the international law The prohibition of torture and other forms of ill-tr...
The use of torture by the Bush administration has raised important questions regarding the strength ...
Abstract Does state identity play a role in why governments enter into international agreements? Giv...
The article explores the content of the prohibition of torture in constitutional and international ...
I examine why states violate norms they embrace as members of international society. The rationalist...
One of the most important developments in international political and legal theory over the last fif...
This paper addresses how the domestic violation of the anti-torture norm within the United States du...
This thesis examines the status of the legal and moral norm against torture within post-9/11 America...
This thesis examines the international norms banning torture and the death penalty, codified in the...
This study of state compliance with international norms against torture focuses on the period 1979-1...
The prohibition of torture is one of the most emblematic norms of the modern human rights movement, ...
Domestic approaches to compliance with international commitments often presume that international la...
The human rights movement has spent considerable energy developing and promoting the adoption of bot...
The human rights movement has spent considerable energy developing and promoting the adoption of bot...
The normative transfer thesis posits that systematic discrimination, inequality, and repression are ...
Prohibition of torture in the international law The prohibition of torture and other forms of ill-tr...
The use of torture by the Bush administration has raised important questions regarding the strength ...
Abstract Does state identity play a role in why governments enter into international agreements? Giv...
The article explores the content of the prohibition of torture in constitutional and international ...
I examine why states violate norms they embrace as members of international society. The rationalist...