The Path of the Boomerang: Human Rights Campaigns, Third-Party Pressure, and Human Rights

Author:

Allendoerfer Michelle Giacobbe1,Murdie Amanda2ORCID,Welch Ryan M3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. George Washington University

2. University of Georgia

3. University of Tampa

Abstract

Abstract How can information campaigns of nongovernmental human rights organizations (HROs) to “name and shame” human rights violators improve human rights conditions? Is the effect direct—does HRO targeting induce violating states to change their behavior? Or is the effect indirect—does pressure by third parties mediate the relationship between HRO actions and changes in human rights practices? The boomerang and spiral models suggest HRO activity provokes third parties, such as other states and international organizations, to pressure violating states. This pressure, in turn, drives violating states to improve human rights conditions. On the other hand, recent empirical work finds third-party pressure can further degrade human rights conditions. In this paper we provide a comprehensive analysis of how these individual factors—HRO activities and pressure from third parties—work together in the larger chain of causal events influencing human rights conditions. Using a causal mediation model, we examine whether HRO campaigning improves human rights directly or if the effect is mediated by costs imposed by powerful actors through sanctions and military interventions. We find that, although HRO activities have an overall positive effect on human rights conditions, the negative effects of third-party pressure somewhat diminish the positive effects.

Funder

Ministry of Education of the Republic of Korea

National Research Foundation

Arizona State University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

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