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Mathew Davies - Realising Rights: How Regional Organisations Socialise Human Rights

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Mathew Davies Realising Rights: How Regional Organisations Socialise Human Rights
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This book presents the hitherto unstudied variety of ways that human rights socialisation is attempted in the context of regional organisations, arguing that existing conceptual accounts of this phenomenon need to be expanded to best explain this diversity.By placing the study of the European Unions relationship with Turkey alongside parallel studies of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations engagement with Myanmar, and the Organization of American States history with Panama, this book argues that rights socialisation efforts are far more diverse than previously thought. Alongside the conditionality that dominates the EU experience, and that has received the majority of existing academic attention, this book argues that both the politics of social influence, the strategic manipulation of legitimacy and the politics of debate over the meaning of membership also drive socialisation efforts. This book situates these socialisation efforts along the journey states take when applying to, joining and then maintaining membership of, a regional organisation, and further distinguishes between what conditions are necessary for socialisation to be attempted and what further requirements are needed for that attempt to be successful.To appreciate the diversity of socialisation politics revealed, this book constructs an inclusive conceptual framework drawing on both rational choice and constructivist theorising and will be of interest to students of Politics and International Relations.

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Realising Rights
This book presents the hitherto unstudied variety of ways that human rights socialisation is attempted in the context of regional organisations, arguing that existing conceptual accounts of this phenomenon need to be expanded to best explain this diversity.
By placing the study of the European Unions relationship with Turkey alongside parallel studies of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations engagement with Myanmar, and the Organization of American States history with Panama, this book argues that rights socialisation efforts are far more diverse than previously thought. Alongside the conditionality that dominates the EU experience, and that has received the majority of existing academic attention, this book argues that both the politics of social influence, the strategic manipulation of legitimacy and the politics of debate over the meaning of membership also drive socialisation efforts. Realising Rights situates these socialisation efforts along the journey that states take when applying to, joining and then maintaining membership of, a regional organisation, and further distinguishes between which conditions are necessary for socialisation to be attempted and which further requirements are needed for that attempt to be successful.
To appreciate the diversity of socialisation politics revealed, this book constructs an inclusive conceptual framework drawing on both rational choice and constructivist theorising and will be of interest to students of Politics and International Relations.
Mathew Davies is a Fellow, Department of International Relations, the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. His research interests lie in the relationship between human rights socialisation and order building in the regional context. His work has been published in the Pacific Review, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, Contemporary Southeast Asia, and the Journal of Human Rights.
Routledge/Warwick Studies in Globalisation
Edited by Shaun Breslin and Ralf Emmers and published in association with the Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation, University of Warwick.
Editorial Board, Jason Sharman Griffith University, Australia, Diane Stone, University of Warwick, UK, and Catherine E. Weaver, University of Texas at Austin.
What is globalisation and does it matter? How can we measure it? What are its policy implications? The Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation at the University of Warwick is an international site for the study of key questions such as these in the theory and practice of globalisation and regionalisation. Its agenda is avowedly interdisciplinary. The work of the Centre will be showcased in this series.
This series comprises two strands:
Warwick Studies in Globalisation addresses the needs of students and teachers, and the titles will be published in hardback and paperback. Titles include:
Globalisation and the Asia-Pacific
Contested territories
Edited by Kris Olds, Peter Dicken, Philip F. Kelly, Lily Kong and Henry Wai-chung Yeung
Regulating the Global Information Society
Edited by Christopher Marsden
Banking on Knowledge
The genesis of the global development network
Edited by Diane Stone
Historical Materialism and Globalisation
Edited by Hazel Smith and Mark Rupert
Civil Society and Global Finance
Edited by Jan Aart Scholte with Albrecht Schnabel
Towards a Global Polity
Edited by Morten Ougaard and Richard Higgott
New Regionalisms in the Global Political Economy
Theories and cases
Edited by Shaun Breslin, Christopher W. Hughes, Nicola Phillips and Ben Rosamond
Development Issues in Global Governance
Public-private partnerships and market multilateralism
Benedicte Bull and Desmond McNeill
Globalizing Democracy
Political parties in emerging democracies
Edited by Peter Burnell
The Globalization of Political Violence
Globalizations shadow
Edited by Richard Devetak and Christopher W. Hughes
Regionalisation and Global Governance
The taming of globalisation?
Edited by Andrew F. Cooper, Christopher W. Hughes and Philippe De Lombaerde
Global Finance in Crisis
The politics of international regulatory change
Edited by Eric Helleiner, Stefano Pagliari and Hubert Zimmermann
Business and Global Governance
Edited by Morten Ougaard and Anna Leander
Governing the Global Economy
Politics, institutions and economic development
Edited by Dag Harald Claes and Carl Henrik Knutsen
Routledge/Warwick Studies in Globalisation is a forum for innovative new research intended for a high-level specialist readership, and the titles will be available in hardback only. Titles include:
1. Non-State Actors and Authority in the Global System
Edited by Richard Higgott, Geoffrey Underhill and Andreas Bieler
2. Globalisation and Enlargement of the European Union
Austrian and Swedish social forces in the struggle over membership
Andreas Bieler
3. Rethinking Empowerment
Gender and development in a global/local world
Edited by Jane L. Parpart, Shirin M. Rai and Kathleen Staudt
4. Globalising Intellectual Property Rights
The TRIPs Agreement
Duncan Matthews
5. Globalisation, Domestic Politics and Regionalism
The ASEAN Free Trade Area
Helen E.S. Nesadurai
6. Microregionalism and Governance in East Asia
Katsuhiro Sasuga
7. Global Knowledge Networks and International Development
Edited by Diane Stone and Simon Maxwell
8. Globalisation and Economic Security in East Asia
Governance and institutions
Edited by Helen E.S. Nesadurai
9. Regional Integration in East Asia and Europe
Convergence or divergence?
Edited by Bertrand Fort and Douglas Webber
10. The Group of Seven
Finance ministries, central banks and global financial governance
Andrew Baker
11. Globalisation and Poverty
Channels and policy responses
Edited by Maurizio Bussolo and Jeffery I Round
12. Democratisation, Governance and Regionalism in East and Southeast Asia
A comparative study
Edited by Ian Marsh
13. Assessment and Measurement of Regional Integration
Edited by Philippe De Lombaerde
14. The World Bank and Governance
A decade of reform and reaction
Edited by Diane Stone and Christopher Wright
15. Nationalism and Global Solidarities
Alternative projections to neoliberal globalization
Edited by James Goodman and Paul James
16. The Evolution of Regionalism in Asia
Economic and security issues
Edited by Heribert Dieter
17. The World Bank and Social Transformation in International Politics
Liberalism, governance and sovereignty
David Williams
18. The Political Consequences of Anti-Americanism
Edited by Richard Higgott and Ivona Malbasic
19. The Role of Ideas in Political Analysis
A portrait of contemporary debates
Edited by Andreas Gofas and Colin Hay
20. Governance of HIV/AIDS
Making participation and accountability count
Edited by Sophie Harman and Franklyn Lisk
21. Selected Writings of John A. Hobson. 193238
The struggle for the international mind
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