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Norm Enforcement, Dependence Networks and the International Criminal Court. Jay Goodliffe Brigham Young University Darren Hawkins Brigham Young University Christine Horne Washington State University Daniel Nielson Brigham Young University. Research Puzzle.
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Norm Enforcement, Dependence Networks and the International Criminal Court Jay Goodliffe Brigham Young University Darren Hawkins Brigham Young University Christine Horne Washington State University Daniel Nielson Brigham Young University
Research Puzzle • Why would any state commit to enforce international human rights norms? • Signing and Ratifying Statute of the International Criminal Court is a Commitment
International Criminal Court Commitments • Delegate Authority to an Independent Prosecutor • Accept Court’s Binding Jurisdiction upon Ratification • Allow Court to Act in Relatively Permissive Conditions: Territorial State or State of the Nationality of Accused has Accepted Court’s Jurisdiction
Norms • Our definition: Rules that are socially enforced • In IR, enforcement of norms is generally decentralized • ICC: Centralized norm enforcement mechanism
Why Commit to the ICC? • Dependence Networks • Benefits: • Cutting Transaction Costs • Lock-in • Costs: • Policy • Unintended Consequences • Flexibility • Imitation and Principles: • Regional and Global Trends • Principled Commitments
Dependence • Sociology Network Literature: Horne (2001, 2004) • Dependence: the value that states place on goods (can be anything) available from an exchange partner and the number of alternative sources they have available.
Dependence Networks • Well-known forms of dependence in IR: • Bilateral/Dyadic Interdependence (relying on a particular partner) • Global Dependence (relying on all) • Dependence within a Network: • A set of partners on whom a state relies for goods
Consequences of Dependence Networks • The more dependent A is on B, the more power (ability to reward and punish) B has over A. • Dependence increases the extent to which actors engage in behavior that is pleasing to their network partners. • One such behavior is norm enforcement.
Diffuse Reciprocity • Actors want to please their network partners • Rewards and punishments from those network partners are not explicitly contingent or equivalent • Actors undertake behavior anticipating some payoff down the road (or fearing punishment for failure to do so)
Dependence Network Hypothesis The more dependent a state is on states who sign or ratify (do not sign or ratify) the ICC, the more (less) likely that state will also sign or ratify the ICC
Measuring Dependence Networks • States value many types of goods • Some providers are more important than others • Dependence Index • Trade Partners weighted by value of trade • Alliance Partners weighted by capabilities • IO Partners with shared memberships in significant IOs
Important Clarification • Not Arguing that states will cut off trade, security or IO ties due to a state’s position on the ICC • Rather, they will use those relationships to reward or punish states appropriately • Example: greater or lesser cooperation on alliance policies or on bilateral trade issues • States anticipate such rewards and punishments whether they occur or not: Rarely explicit or equivalent
Benefits: Reduced Transaction Costs • Theoretically well-established • Conventional Wisdom in ICC case • Security Council created Yugoslav and Rwandan Tribunals • Became increasingly costly over 1990s • Measure: UN-mandated contribution to budgets of these tribunals
Benefits: Lock-in • Moravcsik (2000) • New and unstable democracies create human rights regimes to “lock in” democratic principles in the face of domestic uncertainty (backsliding). • Established democracies and autocracies do not.
Measuring Lock-in • New Democracy • New Democracy if Polity ≥ 7 & <10 yrs • Unstable Democracy × Polity Score • Unstable if Polity > 0 & drops 3 points • Regime Volatility × Polity Score • Regime Volatility = standard deviation of Polity Score (1975-2003)
Costs • Goodliffe and Hawkins (2006): Convention Against Torture • Policy Change: How hard is compliance? • Unintended Consequences: How likely will this be used in an unintended way? • Flexibility: When would human rights abuse be helpful?
Measuring Costs: Policy ChangeHow hard is compliance? • Polity Score • −10 to +10, where +10 is the most democratic • Empowerment Rights Index (lagged) • 0-10 scale, with 10 as the most respectful • Physical Integrity Rights Index (lagged) • 0-8 scale, with 8 as the least abusive
Measuring Costs: Unintended ConsequencesHow likely will this be used in an unintended way? • Legal System • Common Law • Power • ln(GDP) • Exposure: Forces abroad
Measuring Costs: FlexibilityWhen would human rights abuse be helpful? • Military Disputes (external) • 0-5, 5 = war • Threat of Violence (World Bank’s “Political Stability”) • ~N(0,1)
Imitation and Principle • Imitation: Regional or Global Trends • More countries who support a strong ICC in your region or globally • Principled Commitments • Voluntary contributions to the international tribunals established by the Security Council
Method • Duration Model (discrete-time in months) • No restrictions on hazard shape • Missing Data multiply imputed via Amelia
Dependent Variable • Examine Signing and Ratifying/Acceding Separately • Duration begins in July 1998 • (or when country comes into existence) • Censoring date • December 2000 for Signing • December 2004 for Ratifying
What Influences ICC Commitment? • Network Dependence • Level of Democracy (Policy Cost) • Not Lock-in • Not Region • Not Principled Commitments • Not Transaction Costs
Limitations • Dependence cannot explain initial committers, only subsequent committers • Measurement of independent variables • Generalizability to other treaties, other international commitments