Irrational Human Rights? An Examination of International Human Rights Treaties
Martinus Nijhoff (Verlag)
978-90-04-43975-7 (ISBN)
Naiade el-Khoury, Maîtrise und Master 2 Paris X Nanterre, Ph.D. University of Tübingen 2019, Senior Research Fellow Max Planck Foundation for International Peace and the Rule of Law, Heidelberg, Germany.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Objective of the Study
2 Approach
2.1 Compliance
2.2 Effectiveness
3 Argument
4 Legal Framework
5 Methodology
6 Structure
PART 1
A Discourse Analysis of Political Theories – in the Presence of a Paradigm Shift
1 Introduction to Part 1
1 The Four Paradigms or Ideal-Types in the Discipline of International Relations
2 The Different Debates in the Discipline of International Relations
1 The First Debate – an Ontological Question
2 The Second Debate – a Methodological Shift
3 The Inter-Paradigmatic Debate
4 The Third Debate – an Epistemological Question
PART 2
Rational Choice Theories and International Human Rights Treaties
1 Introduction to Part 2
3 Realism: Theory and (the Effectiveness of) International Human Rights Treaties
1 An Outdated Realism?
2 Situating Coercion, Effects and State Behaviour – the Existential Dialectics of Love and Power
3 International Human Rights Law – the Function of a Given Political Order
3.1 The Concept of the Lesser Evil
3.2 The Reality of Human Right Norms
3.3 Consecrating the Primacy of the Political
4 Liberalism: Theory and the Effectiveness of International Human Rights Treaties
1 Situating Domestic Politics, Effects and State Behaviour
2 Prognoses on the Effects of State Behaviour
2.1 The Implementation of the International Human Rights Treaties – the Direct Applicability of Human Rights Treaties
2.2 Compliance with Inconvenient Human Rights Treaty Norms
2.2.1 Testing Easy-Detectable Human Rights Treaty Violations
2.2.2 Testing not Easy-detectable Human Rights Treaty Violations
2.2.3 Empirical Evidence and Conflictual Results
5 Institutionalism: Theory and the Effectiveness of International Human Rights Treaties
1 Defining and Identifying Regimes
2 The International Human Rights Treaty Regime
3 Situating International Regimes, Effects and State Behaviour
3.1 Neoliberal Institutionalism
3.1.1 The Reasons Behind Compliance
3.1.2 Rational Choice and Functional Explanation
3.2 Neorealism
3.3 Constructivist Institutionalism
3.3.1 Weak Cognitivists – Leaving Intact the Ontology
3.4 Towards a More Comprehensive Approach – a Contextualized Rationalist Solution
4 Prognoses on the Effects of State Behaviour
4.1 Implementation of International Human Rights Treaties
4.1.1 Reciprocity – Relative Gains and Hegemonic Power
4.1.2 Game Theoretical Constellations
4.2 Compliance with Inconvenient Human Rights Treaty Norms
4.2.1 Circumventing Inconvenient Norms by the Formulation of Reservations
4.2.2 Game Theoretical Constellations
5 Constructivism – Towards an Entire Different Ontology
PART 3
Normative Choice Theories and International Human Rights Treaties
1 Introduction to Part 3
6 Fairness: Theory and the Effectiveness of International Human Rights Treaties
1 Situating Legitimacy and Distributive Justice, Effects and State Behaviour
1.1 Legitimacy – the Procedural Aspect of Fairness
1.2 Distributive Justice – the Substantive Aspect of Fairness
2 Prognoses on the Effects on State Behaviour – the Quest for Rationality
2.1 Considerations of Legitimacy – a ‘Felt’ Sense of Obligation
2.1.1 Determinacy of the ICCPR and the ICESR
2.1.2 Symbolic Validation of International Human Rights Treaties
2.1.3 Coherence in the Application of the ICCPR and the ICESR
2.1.4 Adherence to International Human Rights Treaties
2.2 Considerations of Distributive Justice – the Consequential Effects of Norms
7 Transnational Legal Process: Theory and the Effectiveness of International Human Rights Treaties
1 Situating Vertical Internalization, Effects and State Behaviour
2 Prognosis on the Effects of State Behaviour
2.1 Implementation of International Human Rights Treaties
2.1.1 Constructivist Insights – Legal, Political, Social Strategies of Persuasion
2.1.2 Constructivist Insights – Acculturation as Mechanisms of Persuasion
2.2 Compliance with Inconvenient Human Rights Treaty Norms
2.2.1 Constructivist Insights on the Legal Process and Norm Properties
2.2.2 Constructivist Insights on the Role of Idea and Beliefs
8 Managerial Process: Theory and the Effectiveness of International Human Rights Treaties
1 Situating Persuasiveness, Effects and State Behaviour
1.1 Propensity to Comply
1.2 The Reasons Behind Non-compliance
1.3 Sanctions
1.4 Managerial Strategy
2 Prognoses on the Effects on State Behaviour – the Quest for Dialogue and Capacity Building
2.1 Implementation of the International Human Rights Treaties
2.1.1 A Dynamic of Dialogue and Accountability
2.1.2 The Use of Human Rights Indicators
2.2 Compliance with Inconvenient Human Rights Treaty Norms – a Lack of Discourse or Rather a Meaningless Discourse?
9 The Autonomous Legal Discourse and the Appellative or the Discursive Effect of Human Rights
1 The Concept of Law and the Concept of Legal Validity
2 Effectiveness and Legal Validity – Effectiveness as a Juristic Presupposition
3 Legal Validity, Social Reality, and the Autonomous Human Rights Discourse
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
| Erscheinungsdatum | 15.01.2021 |
|---|---|
| Reihe/Serie | International Studies in Human Rights ; 135 |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Maße | 155 x 235 mm |
| Gewicht | 610 g |
| Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► Allgemeines / Lexika |
| Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht | |
| Recht / Steuern ► Öffentliches Recht ► Völkerrecht | |
| ISBN-10 | 90-04-43975-7 / 9004439757 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-90-04-43975-7 / 9789004439757 |
| Zustand | Neuware |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
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