Linking the Death Penalty to Trade: Bureaucratic Politics among European Institutions

Yeonha Jung, M. Koo
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Abstract

For decades, the European Union (EU) has claimed to be a global champion of human rights and made many efforts accordingly both inside and outside the region. For many Europeans, linking human rights issues to internal and international trade has become as natural as linking the environment to trade. The death penalty is also a prominent human rights issue, and the EU calls for its universal abolishment. This study examines why and how the EU has connected the death penalty issue to its trade policy. Building upon the literature on issue linkages, this study categorizes the historical development of the linkage between the death penalty and trade in four different phases: recognition, integration, institutionalization, and expansion. It is argued that the linkage has been strengthened in terms of its “coerciveness” and “directness” over the past few decades. This study uses Graham Allison’s (1971) bureaucratic politics model to explain how and to what extent the internal politics among European institutions, particularly between the European Parliament and the European Commission, have determined the ways in which the two otherwise separate issues have been linked. The European Parliament is the main advocate of such a linkage and has successfully induced the European Commission to promote the abolishment of the death penalty through its commercial power despite its earlier objection. This study claims that the consequence of the death penalty–trade linkage is the empowerment
将死刑与贸易联系起来:欧洲机构间的官僚政治
几十年来,欧盟一直声称自己是全球人权捍卫者,并在该地区内外做出了许多相应的努力。对许多欧洲人来说,将人权问题与国内和国际贸易联系起来,就像将环境与贸易联系起来一样自然。死刑也是一个突出的人权问题,欧盟呼吁普遍废除死刑。本研究探讨了欧盟为何以及如何将死刑问题与其贸易政策联系起来。基于有关问题联系的文献,本研究将死刑与贸易联系的历史发展分为四个不同的阶段:承认、整合、制度化和扩展。有人认为,在过去的几十年里,这种联系在“强制性”和“直观性”方面得到了加强。本研究使用Graham Allison(1971)的官僚政治模型来解释欧洲机构之间的内部政治,特别是欧洲议会和欧盟委员会之间的内部政治,如何以及在多大程度上决定了这两个原本独立的问题联系在一起的方式。欧洲议会是这种联系的主要倡导者,并成功地促使欧洲委员会通过其商业力量推动废除死刑,尽管它早先曾表示反对。这项研究声称,死刑与贸易联系的后果是赋予权力
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