International human rights law is a field concerned with causality. While scholars in other fields argue about how laws can be changed to maximize their effectiveness, scholars of international human rights law still regularly debate whether the major international agreements have had any effect on state behavior. Part of the reason that this threshold question is still contested is that there are a number of barriers to causal inference that make answering it with observational data incredibly difficult. Given these obstacles to using observational data, and the importance of the topic, scholars have begun to use experimental methods to study the effects of commitments to human rights agreements. This Essay discusses the motivations behind...
The field of human rights monitoring has become preoccupied with statistical methods for measuring p...
Previous research suggests that most treaties are ineffective in ensuring countries’ compliance with...
International law is well known to lack enforcement mechanisms similar in effectiveness to those tha...
International human rights law is a field concerned with causality. While scholars in other fields a...
Scholars have long speculated that commitments to human rights agreements are unlikely to have an ef...
Why do states ratify international human rights treaties? How much do human rights treaties influenc...
The monitoring of human rights performance is increasingly a measurement exercise. This is true for ...
This paper is a revised published version of a Max Weber Lecture on "Reframing International Human R...
The authors thank Neil Malhotra, Ken Schultz, Mike Tomz and the participants in the Stanford Interna...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
The literature on human rights generally assumes that when a state fails to comply with human rights...
After the nonbinding Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many global and regional human rights t...
Why do states ratify international human rights treaties? How much do human rights treaties influenc...
Scholarship on international law has undergone an empirical revolution. Throughout the revolution, h...
The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/mershon11/042811.mp4Dai discu...
The field of human rights monitoring has become preoccupied with statistical methods for measuring p...
Previous research suggests that most treaties are ineffective in ensuring countries’ compliance with...
International law is well known to lack enforcement mechanisms similar in effectiveness to those tha...
International human rights law is a field concerned with causality. While scholars in other fields a...
Scholars have long speculated that commitments to human rights agreements are unlikely to have an ef...
Why do states ratify international human rights treaties? How much do human rights treaties influenc...
The monitoring of human rights performance is increasingly a measurement exercise. This is true for ...
This paper is a revised published version of a Max Weber Lecture on "Reframing International Human R...
The authors thank Neil Malhotra, Ken Schultz, Mike Tomz and the participants in the Stanford Interna...
Though research suggests that international regimes that coordinate economic and security policy can...
The literature on human rights generally assumes that when a state fails to comply with human rights...
After the nonbinding Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many global and regional human rights t...
Why do states ratify international human rights treaties? How much do human rights treaties influenc...
Scholarship on international law has undergone an empirical revolution. Throughout the revolution, h...
The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/mershon11/042811.mp4Dai discu...
The field of human rights monitoring has become preoccupied with statistical methods for measuring p...
Previous research suggests that most treaties are ineffective in ensuring countries’ compliance with...
International law is well known to lack enforcement mechanisms similar in effectiveness to those tha...