Locking in democracy? Transitions, returning autocratic elites, and human rights treaty commitment

Roman-Gabriel Olar
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Abstract

Under what conditions are new democracies more committed to human rights? Existing explanations focus on the logic of the democratic lock-in as elites in new democracies commit their countries to international human rights treaties and organizations to safeguard against future nondemocratic threats. However, this proposition receives mixed empirical support within the literature, and suffers of endogeneity as it treats all democratization episodes as equivalent. Building on insights from the democratization literature, this paper develops a novel theoretical framework that provides a more direct explanation on the conditions under which political elites in new democracies are more likely to commit to human rights treaties. Using a new measure of returning autocratic elites and an instrumental variable design, the results show that democratic cabinets with a higher share of former autocratic elites are less committed to the international human rights regime. These results have implications for democratic consolidation and human rights compliance.

锁定民主?转型、专制精英的回归以及对人权条约的承诺
新的民主国家在什么条件下更致力于人权?现有的解释集中在民主锁定的逻辑上,因为新兴民主国家的精英们将他们的国家承诺加入国际人权条约和组织,以防范未来的非民主威胁。然而,这一命题在文献中得到了混合的经验支持,并且由于它将所有民主化事件视为等同而遭受内生性。基于民主化文献的见解,本文发展了一个新的理论框架,为新民主国家的政治精英更有可能承诺人权条约的条件提供了更直接的解释。使用回归专制精英的新措施和工具变量设计,结果表明,前专制精英比例较高的民主内阁对国际人权制度的承诺较少。这些结果对巩固民主和遵守人权具有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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