Replication Data for: Do Governments Mean Business When They Derogate? Human Rights Violations During Notified States of Emergency, Review of International Organizations, 8 (1), 2013, pp. 1-31
收藏DataONE2017-02-26 更新2024-06-26 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:f5d7f9bbc03e857d660d1be79d84d5467a94a8236cb41b04ec9d2ab93208778d
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Whether international human rights treaties constrain the behavior of governments is a hotly contested issue that has drawn much scholarly attention. The possibility to derogate from some, but not all, of the rights enshrined in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) during declared and officially notified states of emergency provides a hitherto unexplored test case. If governments were increasingly violating non-derogable rights during derogation periods then this provides evidence that the ICCPR has no sufficient constraining effect on state parties. I analyze whether specific individual human rights as well as two aggregate rights measures are systematically more violated during derogation periods in a global sample over the period 1981 to 2008. I find that regime type matters: autocracies step up violation of both non-derogable and derogable rights, anocracies increasingly violate some derogable and some non-derogable rights, whereas democracies see no statistically significant change in their human rights behavior during derogation periods. This result suggests that the main general international human rights treaty fails to achieve its objective of shielding certain rights from derogation where, as in autocracies and anocracies, a constraining effect would be needed most.
创建时间:
2023-11-21



