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Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? ...
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ProQuest Information and Learning Co.
Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? The Determinants of Cross-national Variations in Protections for Itinerant Populations.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,手稿 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? The Determinants of Cross-national Variations in Protections for Itinerant Populations./
作者:
Hosoki, Ralph Ittonen.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (217 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-03(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International79-03A(E).
標題:
Sociology. -
電子資源:
click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9780355307788
Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? The Determinants of Cross-national Variations in Protections for Itinerant Populations.
Hosoki, Ralph Ittonen.
Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? The Determinants of Cross-national Variations in Protections for Itinerant Populations.
- 1 online resource (217 pages)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-03(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Irvine, 2017.
Includes bibliographical references
This study compares the determinants of cross-national variations in levels of legal protections for three itinerant groups (trafficked persons, internationally displaced persons, and migrants) to better understand why levels of codified protective laws and political sympathy/lenience for some groups stem from exogenous/global normative influences, while for others, what matters is the extent to which states act upon their own state interests. The study employs fuzzy set qualitative comparative analyses (fsQCA) to complement statistical analyses, and theoretically adjudicates between the explanatory strengths of institutional (i.e., world society theory and international relations constructivism) and more conventional interest-based functionalist and realist perspectives. It finds that although codified protections for itinerant groups are functions of both normative human rights influences and state interests, factors that are exogenous to state interests are the primary "ingredients" for legal protections for groups that are both 1) understood as unthreatening to state interests, and 2) globally socially constructed as "vulnerable" and therefore "deserving" of protections by means of involuntary or forced presence in a foreign land (e.g., trafficked persons and internationally displaced persons). Normative human rights influences are either absent or meaningful in conjunction with state interest factors in shaping protections for more "threatening" and less "vulnerable" groups (e.g., migrants). In each empirical chapter, each group is analyzed further by disaggregating the group into subgroups, whose variegated protections logics are also shaped by juxtapositions of "deservingness" and "threat to state interests."
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2018
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9780355307788Subjects--Topical Terms:
551705
Sociology.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
554714
Electronic books.
Whom Do Human Rights Norms Protect? The Determinants of Cross-national Variations in Protections for Itinerant Populations.
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This study compares the determinants of cross-national variations in levels of legal protections for three itinerant groups (trafficked persons, internationally displaced persons, and migrants) to better understand why levels of codified protective laws and political sympathy/lenience for some groups stem from exogenous/global normative influences, while for others, what matters is the extent to which states act upon their own state interests. The study employs fuzzy set qualitative comparative analyses (fsQCA) to complement statistical analyses, and theoretically adjudicates between the explanatory strengths of institutional (i.e., world society theory and international relations constructivism) and more conventional interest-based functionalist and realist perspectives. It finds that although codified protections for itinerant groups are functions of both normative human rights influences and state interests, factors that are exogenous to state interests are the primary "ingredients" for legal protections for groups that are both 1) understood as unthreatening to state interests, and 2) globally socially constructed as "vulnerable" and therefore "deserving" of protections by means of involuntary or forced presence in a foreign land (e.g., trafficked persons and internationally displaced persons). Normative human rights influences are either absent or meaningful in conjunction with state interest factors in shaping protections for more "threatening" and less "vulnerable" groups (e.g., migrants). In each empirical chapter, each group is analyzed further by disaggregating the group into subgroups, whose variegated protections logics are also shaped by juxtapositions of "deservingness" and "threat to state interests."
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