公众对遵守国际法的偏好:尊重法律义务还是遵循惯例?

Saki Kuzushima, Kenneth Mori McElwain, Yuki Shiraito
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管关于国际法约束国家行为的能力存在重大争议,但最近的研究指出,国内机制可以阻止不遵守,最明显的是公众对违反条约协议的政府的反对。然而,现有的研究并没有明确区分这种反对背后的两种不同的、理论上重要的动机:尊重法律义务与遵循共同的全球惯例的愿望。我们在日本设计了一个创新的调查实验,直接操纵关于这两个潜在渠道的信息。我们研究了人们对四种有争议的做法的态度,这些做法违反了国际法——同姓婚姻、捕鲸、仇恨言论管制和死刑——并发现法律义务线索对受访者态度的影响比常见做法线索更大。我们还展示了基于党派关系和对全球公民社会的认同的亚群体差异。这些结果表明,国际法的法律性质对国内合规拉动至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public preferences for international law compliance: Respecting legal obligations or conforming to common practices?

Despite significant debate about the ability of international law to constrain state behavior, recent research points to domestic mechanisms that deter non-compliance, most notably public disapproval of governments that violate treaty agreements. However, existing studies have not explicitly differentiated two distinct, theoretically important motivations that underlie this disapproval: respect for legal obligations versus the desire to follow common global practices. We design an innovative survey experiment in Japan that manipulates information about these two potential channels directly. We examine attitudes towards four controversial practices that fall afoul of international law—same-surname marriage, whaling, hate speech regulation, and capital punishment—and find that the legal obligation cue has a stronger effect on respondent attitudes than the common practices cue. We also show subgroup differences based on partisanship and identification with global civil society. These results demonstrate that the legal nature of international law is crucial to domestic compliance pull.

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