k 2014

Political Regimes and International Human Rights Commitments: The Moderation Effect of Treaty's Control Mechanism

JANOVSKÝ, Jozef a Katarína ŠIPULOVÁ

Základní údaje

Originální název

Political Regimes and International Human Rights Commitments: The Moderation Effect of Treaty's Control Mechanism

Název anglicky

Political Regimes and International Human Rights Commitments: The Moderation Effect of Treaty's Control Mechanism

Vydání

Venice Academy of Human Rights - PluriCourts (University of Oslo): Judicial Legitimacy and the Rule of Law (Workshop lead by Philip Alston), 2014

Další údaje

Typ výsledku

Prezentace na konferencích

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Klíčová slova anglicky

International human rights commitments; political regimes; control mechanism

Příznaky

Mezinárodní význam
Změněno: 23. 7. 2014 16:34, Mgr. et Mgr. Katarína Šipulová, Ph.D., MSt

Anotace

V originále

Different states ratify different international human rights treaties. Many explanations for this variance have been proposed, relating e.g. to the character of the political regime, political ideologies of the governing parties, treaty characteristics and the EU accession process. We argue that the degree of strength and legitimacy of the treaty’s control mechanism moderates the effect of the political regime. For example, non-democracies are less likely to ratify a human rights treaty if its control mechanism is strong but not otherwise. The moderation effect hypothesis is tested using a dataset of the behaviour of Slovakia and the Czech Republic with regards to more than 190 human rights treaties. The unique political experience of these countries contains non-democratic, semi-democratic, democratic and transitional periods as well. This is very important as it allows for a detailed examination of the moderation effect of interest. Other domestic-level, national-level, international-level and treaty-level variables were also collected and serve as control variables. In-depth qualitative analysis for a few key treaties is provided to complement the statistical analysis.

Anglicky

Different states ratify different international human rights treaties. Many explanations for this variance have been proposed, relating e.g. to the character of the political regime, political ideologies of the governing parties, treaty characteristics and the EU accession process. We argue that the degree of strength and legitimacy of the treaty’s control mechanism moderates the effect of the political regime. For example, non-democracies are less likely to ratify a human rights treaty if its control mechanism is strong but not otherwise. The moderation effect hypothesis is tested using a dataset of the behaviour of Slovakia and the Czech Republic with regards to more than 190 human rights treaties. The unique political experience of these countries contains non-democratic, semi-democratic, democratic and transitional periods as well. This is very important as it allows for a detailed examination of the moderation effect of interest. Other domestic-level, national-level, international-level and treaty-level variables were also collected and serve as control variables. In-depth qualitative analysis for a few key treaties is provided to complement the statistical analysis.