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Assessing Trade and Human Rights Regime Impacts on State Autonomy for Policy and Regulatory Activities

Leasure, Robert LU (2018) SIMV29 20181
Department of Political Science
Graduate School
Master of Science in Development Studies
Abstract
The human rights regime and the trade regime set obligations on states that may create conflicts that challenge a state’s autonomy for policy and regulatory practices. To deal with these conflicts, we argue that states employ different causal mechanisms from Risse, Ropp and Sikkink’s spiral model when setting their commitments to, and executing compliance with, these regime obligations, and that the conditions that determine their willingness and ability to do so change over time. We further argue that the presence of more negative than positive spillovers between the two regimes compel states to integrate the two regimes into a policy framework with primary influence coming from the regime with the most substantial incentives and... (More)
The human rights regime and the trade regime set obligations on states that may create conflicts that challenge a state’s autonomy for policy and regulatory practices. To deal with these conflicts, we argue that states employ different causal mechanisms from Risse, Ropp and Sikkink’s spiral model when setting their commitments to, and executing compliance with, these regime obligations, and that the conditions that determine their willingness and ability to do so change over time. We further argue that the presence of more negative than positive spillovers between the two regimes compel states to integrate the two regimes into a policy framework with primary influence coming from the regime with the most substantial incentives and persuasion. We evaluate these arguments based on a case study of water management policy in the nation of Cape Verde over the period of 2001 to 2015, using the method of process tracing to evaluate official documents and contemporary accounts. Based on these findings, we are not able to conclude that states prefer to mitigate negative spillovers through regime integration within a policy framework. Instead, we note that comparative studies across states should be performed to make this determination. However, we are able to conclude that the trade – specifically aid-for-trade – regime offered Cape Verde the most in terms of incentives and persuasion, and that its policy framework integrates its policy goals for both regimes but with the aid-for-trade regime significantly shaping Cape Verde’s policy preferences. (Less)
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author
Leasure, Robert LU
supervisor
organization
alternative title
A Case Study of Water Services in Cape Verde
course
SIMV29 20181
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Right to water, human rights regime, trade regime, state autonomy, policy integration
language
English
id
8968089
date added to LUP
2019-02-19 10:32:28
date last changed
2019-02-19 10:32:28
@misc{8968089,
  abstract     = {{The human rights regime and the trade regime set obligations on states that may create conflicts that challenge a state’s autonomy for policy and regulatory practices. To deal with these conflicts, we argue that states employ different causal mechanisms from Risse, Ropp and Sikkink’s spiral model when setting their commitments to, and executing compliance with, these regime obligations, and that the conditions that determine their willingness and ability to do so change over time. We further argue that the presence of more negative than positive spillovers between the two regimes compel states to integrate the two regimes into a policy framework with primary influence coming from the regime with the most substantial incentives and persuasion. We evaluate these arguments based on a case study of water management policy in the nation of Cape Verde over the period of 2001 to 2015, using the method of process tracing to evaluate official documents and contemporary accounts. Based on these findings, we are not able to conclude that states prefer to mitigate negative spillovers through regime integration within a policy framework. Instead, we note that comparative studies across states should be performed to make this determination. However, we are able to conclude that the trade – specifically aid-for-trade – regime offered Cape Verde the most in terms of incentives and persuasion, and that its policy framework integrates its policy goals for both regimes but with the aid-for-trade regime significantly shaping Cape Verde’s policy preferences.}},
  author       = {{Leasure, Robert}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Assessing Trade and Human Rights Regime Impacts on State Autonomy for Policy and Regulatory Activities}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}