Signing CEDAW and Women’s Rights: Human Rights Treaty Signature and Legal Mobilization

Author:

Comstock Audrey L.

Abstract

Can commitment to international human rights law promote human rights when the commitment is not yet legally binding? I argue that treaty signature can be used by non-governmental organizations and other rights actors to mobilize around rights standards and hold states accountable in the lead up to binding treaty ratification. Using the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination (CEDAW) as a case, I argue that CEDAW signature can have a positive impact on women’s rights. I find overall support for the argument that, following signature, states are significantly and positively associated with higher women’s rights. The findings hold across numerous robustness checks. Using an illustrative case of CEDAW signature and mobilization in the United States, I demonstrate that activists drew on the treaty following signature in the absence of ratification. The argument and results contribute to the study of international law and women’s rights mobilization, highlighting the importance of signature commitment as a tool for advancing women’s rights in advance of treaty ratification.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Law,General Social Sciences

Reference96 articles.

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3. Cingranelli, David L. , Richards, David L. , and Chad Clay, K. . 2013. Short Variable Descriptions for Indicators in the CIRI Human Rights Dataset, version 5.21.14. https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BxDpF6GQ-6fbY25CYVRIOTJ2MHM/edit

4. U.S. Ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women;Ernst;Michigan Journal of Gender and Law,1996

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