
Contents
Part front matter for Part I The Calculus of Abuse
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Published:March 2013
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Extract
This book is about how international law and state power can change the benefits and costs of protecting human rights. Before we look to law and power, however, we must understand why abuse arises in the first place and why abusive practices persist. That’s the task of chapters 2 and 3. In them, I adopt the perspective that the perpetrators of human rights abuse act in ways similar to other criminals. That vantage point not only helps us understand when and how law and power might have an impact on abusive behavior—tasks taken up in other portions of this book. It also opens the door for human rights scholars and practitioners to incorporate some of the lessons from fields such as criminology. Those insights include practical lessons and techniques—such as crime avoidance, prevention, and deterrence—that could have a large impact on the patterns of human rights abuse. In addition to the important field of criminology, I also draw on insights from law, politics, sociology, and psychology.
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