
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The Pre-Existing Theoretical and Empirical Overlap The Pre-Existing Theoretical and Empirical Overlap
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Incorporating FPA into Human Rights Scholarship Incorporating FPA into Human Rights Scholarship
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What FPA Can Learn from Human Rights Scholarship What FPA Can Learn from Human Rights Scholarship
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What Policy-Makers Can Learn at the Junction of Human Rights and FPA What Policy-Makers Can Learn at the Junction of Human Rights and FPA
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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35 Foreign Policy and Human Rights
Get accessColton Heffington is a senior member of the technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories in the department covering global security and cooperation. At Sandia, his research and engagements address nuclear non-proliferation. In addition to his published research on human rights, international conflict, sanctions, and terrorism, he has helped create and maintain the Most Important Problems Database, covering issue salience and public opinion in the US since 1939.
Amanda Murdie is the Georgia Athletic Association Professor of International Affairs and Head of the Department of International Affairs in the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia. She is a past editor-in-chief of International Studies Review. She is widely published in the areas of human rights, human security, and non-governmental organizations.
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Published:22 February 2024
Cite
Abstract
In this review, we explain how human rights research can inform the study of foreign policy analysis (FPA), namely by surveying where certain foreign policy actions (sanctions, military intervention, foreign aid) can help or harm human rights outcomes and showing how action by external non-state actors may motivate domestic respect for human rights. Evidence shows this is especially likely when international civil society effectively frames an issue. A review of published work further reveals that respect for human rights lowers the risk of war and terrorism. We also consider how FPA research can influence the study of human rights, focusing on the effects of state identity on domestic and foreign policy and the feedback loop between domestic and international norms. Research further indicates that non-state actors, especially non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the public, and the media, play a role in defining appropriate foreign policies related to human rights.
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