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Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

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Page 1: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises

ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Page 2: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Compare:

“It is difficult to restrain myself from doing something to stop this attempt to exterminate a race, but I realize I am here as an Ambassador and must abide by the principles of non-interference with the internal affairs of another country.”

Henry Morgenthau, US ambassador to Turkey, to the US secretary of state, August 11, 1915

Page 3: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Two struggles for human rights movement

• First, create new language to articulate concerns of individuals in light of state power

• Second, for this language to make a difference

Page 4: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Looks good on the first front…

• human rights language has replaced other languages of social change: modernization theory; dependency theory; Marxism

• human rights revolution: activists no longer confined to vigils – sit at able

Page 5: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 6: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 7: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Some of the Bigger Ones

• Amnesty International• Human Rights Watch• International Commission of Jurists • International Federation of Human Rights • International Committee of the Red Cross• Human Rights First • Lawyers Without Borders• Doctors Without Borders • Physicians for Human Rights

Page 8: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

A Complicated World

• NGO’s• INGO’s – International NGO• IGO’s – Intergovernmental Organizations• QUANGOs – quasi-NGO’s • DONGOs – donor-organized NGO’s• AGO’s – anti governmental • GRINGO’s – government-regulated • BINGO – business and industry NGO’s• DODONGO’s – donor-dominated

Page 9: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 10: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Alas… not so good on the second…

Page 11: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

CIRI Human Rights Data Project

(Cingranelli/Richards)

Page 12: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Diffusion of human rights norms• networks among domestic/

transnational actors

• put norm-violating states on international agenda; remind liberal states of their identity as preservers of human rights (“naming/ shaming”)

• empower and legitimate claims of domestic opposition against norm-violating governments

Page 13: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

And: Spiral effect…

Page 14: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

How treaties influence domestic politics

• Change the national policy agenda

• Enhance possibility of litigation

• Mobilize groups (influence values; increase chance of success)

Page 15: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Change the national policy agenda

• Japan: women’s equal employment

• Signed CEDAW, 1980 -- reforms were driven by desire to make a deadline

• Litigation and amendment in the 1990s improvements

Page 16: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

number of Supreme Court

cases

1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004

Year

Torture litigation in Israel

Cases Filed Cases Decided

1991:Israel ratifies

CAT

1999:Landmark

torture ruling

Page 17: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Helsinki Principles: I. Sovereign equality, respect for rights inherent in sovereignty II. Refraining from the threat or use of force III. Inviolability of frontiersIV. Territorial integrity of States V. Peaceful settlement of disputes VI. Non-intervention in internal affairs VII. Respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, e.g.

freedom of thought, conscience, religion or belief VIII. Equal rights and self-determination of peoples IX. Co-operation among States X. Fulfillment in good faith of obligations under international law

Page 18: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

1975 Helsinki Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe

• John Lewis Gaddis, in "The Cold War: A New History" (2005): “Leonid Brezhnev had looked forward (….) to the publicity he would gain... when the Soviet public learned of the final settlement of the postwar boundaries for which they had sacrificed so much... [Instead, the Helsinki Accords] gradually became a manifesto of the dissident and liberal movement... [T]he people who lived under these systems — at least the more courageous — could claim official permission to say what they thought."

Page 19: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Human rights norms contributing to transformation of domestic practice

• Dissidents responded by creating social movements to challenge repressive state practices

• Polish and Czechoslovak government responded by denying they were violators

• tacitly granted more pol. space to groups identified with Helsinki norms

Page 20: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 21: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Berlin Wall

Page 22: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 23: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 24: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

November 9, 1989

Page 25: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 26: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 27: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 28: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 29: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Statistical Skepticism

• Large-scale analyses of causes of oppressions not done before 90s

• Many governments sign on to norms, few implement them -- especially those governments most likely to abuse citizens

• Suggest human rights laws/ organizations have only limited effects -- efforts at “naming and shaming” do not appear to work much better

Page 30: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Convention Against Torture Ratifications and the Torture Scale

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

Year

Tortu

re S

cale

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

% C

ount

ries

Ratif

ied

CAT

torture % Ratified CAT

Page 31: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Hafner-Burton/Tsutsui:

• “No matter how we measure repression or personal integrity rights, repressive states that allow murder, torture, kidnapping, and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment of people just as commonly belong to the CCPR and the CAT outlawing these behaviors as governments that protect human rights reasonably well” (p 410f).

Page 32: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

• Ratifying treaty can relieve pressure for change imposed by international actors, who may rely more heavily on positions than effects

• reduction in pressure may lead country that ratifies to improve its practice less than it otherwise might

Page 33: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Endogeneity of treaty negotiations

• Governments prone to make agreements that comport with activities they are willing to engage in anyway

• makes it hard to assess precisely what “influenced” government

Page 34: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Why divergence between quantitative and qualitative

approaches? • Different approaches make people notice different facets of

reality

• both needed: quantitative studies need to be supplemented by country narratives to be sure they are on the right track and have explanatory power

• qualitative studies need to be supplemented by quantitative studies to get a better sense of what factors “really” were causally efficacious

Page 35: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Good News from Beth Simmons, Mobilizing for Human Rights (2009)

• Human rights treaty commitments make difference in countries that are undergoing democratic reforms anyway

• If so, then especially many Latin-American countries and Eastern-European countries will really have been helped substantially in this way

Page 36: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Good News from Beth Simmons, Mobilizing for Human Rights

(2009) • Concluding the book: “Change has been gradual but encouragingly cumulative. As MLK jr. said: ‘The arc of history is long, but it bends towards justice.’ International human rights treaties have helped to nudge the human race in the right direction.” (p 380)

• Picture that emerges here is that respect for human rights is driven largely by large-scale social and political processes (democracy, peace) – these are historical macro-phenomena not easily affected by policy-makers

Page 37: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

But:

• This leaves warning from Hafner-Burton and Tsutsui – that human rights treaties work only where there is some domestic resonance already

• But that also means they do not work to change the behavior of the worst offenders

Page 38: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Case Study in the Mechanics of Human Rights Regimes: Democratic Delegation in Postwar Europe

• European Human Rights Regime

Page 39: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Why would any government, democratic or dictatorial,

favor establishing an independent international authority, the sole purpose

of which is to constrain domestic sovereignty?

Page 40: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Council of Europe: Founding Members/Later Members

Page 41: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012
Page 42: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Confusing: same flag for EU

Page 43: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Human Rights• European Convention on Human

Rights (1950)

• Regionally binding treaty

• Additional protocols signed by everybody eliminating the death penalty

• European Court of Human Rights: allows for individual complaints – can now appeal directly to court

Page 44: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Regional Human Rights Treaties

• European

• Inter-American

• African

• South-East Asian

Page 45: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

European Court of Human rights • Members have incorporated

Convention into their own national legal orders

• impact of case law is enormous

• National judges, elected officials, and administrators under pressure to make Convention rights effective within national system

Page 46: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Major provider of international public law

• Convention on Cybercrime • Convention on the Prevention of Terrorism• Conventions against Corruption and Organized Crime• Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human

Beings • Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine

Page 47: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

• for the sake of restricting future governmental discretion and for the sake of reducing domestic political uncertainty

• For which governments would this be of interest? -- primarily for governments that worry about future of respect for human rights/democracy

Page 48: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

• supported by the finding that new democracies all supported binding human rights commitments: Austria, France, Italy, Iceland, Ireland, Germany (plus Belgium)

• Opposing enforcement: Greece, Turkey, Portugal, Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands, Norway, UK, Luxembourg

Page 49: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Why?

• countries where democracy was not firmly established found it advantageous to “lock themselves in”

• established democracies were worried about preserving political idiosyncracies

Page 50: Excursion: A Brief Glance at the Political Reality of Human Rights Treatises ER 11, Gov E-1040 Spring 2012

Same phenomenon re. ICCPR

• in early 50s, most stable modern democracies (e.g., US and UK) allied with authoritarian states like the Soviet Union, China, South Africa, and Iran, in opposition to the inclusion of compulsory, enforceable commitments

• Alliance in favor included recently established democracies in continental Europe, Latin America, and Asia.