Committed to Rights

About The Book

International treaties are the primary means for codifying global human rights standards. However nation-states are able to make their own choices in how to legally commit to human rights treaties. A state commits to a treaty through four commitment acts: signature ratification accession and succession. These acts signify diverging legal paths with distinct contexts and mechanisms for rights change reflecting legalization negotiation sovereignty and domestic constraints. How a state moves through these actions determines how when and to what extent it will comply with the human rights treaties it commits to. Using legal archival and quantitative analysis this important book shows that disentangling legal paths to commitment reveals distinct and significant compliance outcomes. Legal context matters for human rights and has important implications for the conceptualization of treaty commitment the consideration of non-binding commitment and an optimistic outlook for the impact of human rights treaties.
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