2020
DOI: 10.1177/1354066120949628
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Conceptualizing and assessing norm strength in International Relations

Abstract: What constitutes a strong or a weak norm? Scholars often refer to strong or weak, or strengthening or weakening norms, yet there are widespread inconsistencies in terminology and no agreed-upon measures. This has hindered the accumulation of knowledge and made it difficult to test competing hypotheses about norm development and contestation. To address these conceptual problems and their analytical implications, this article conceptualizes norm strength as the extent of collective expectations related to a pri… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…First limited to protecting kin living in other states, then evolving into "saving strangers" (Wheeler, 2000) in the late 20th century, the norm acquired a higher profile, especially after the Cold War. Despite being essentially different concepts, humanitarian intervention and R2P pillar III (the international community's responsibility to protect by using force when a state is manifestly failing to protect its population) are variations that have developed upon the same "principled idea" (Hirsch & Dixon, 2021) of human protection alternatively referred to in the literature as "humanitarianism" (Hoffman & Weiss, 2018), "norms of protection" (Francis et al, 2012), or "human protection norm cluster" (Gallagher et al, 2022). Situating humanitarian intervention and R2P pillar III within the broader umbrella of the norm of human protection allows us to bring the norm's puzzling trajectory into sharper focus.…”
Section: Norm Of Human Protection: Rise and Demisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…First limited to protecting kin living in other states, then evolving into "saving strangers" (Wheeler, 2000) in the late 20th century, the norm acquired a higher profile, especially after the Cold War. Despite being essentially different concepts, humanitarian intervention and R2P pillar III (the international community's responsibility to protect by using force when a state is manifestly failing to protect its population) are variations that have developed upon the same "principled idea" (Hirsch & Dixon, 2021) of human protection alternatively referred to in the literature as "humanitarianism" (Hoffman & Weiss, 2018), "norms of protection" (Francis et al, 2012), or "human protection norm cluster" (Gallagher et al, 2022). Situating humanitarian intervention and R2P pillar III within the broader umbrella of the norm of human protection allows us to bring the norm's puzzling trajectory into sharper focus.…”
Section: Norm Of Human Protection: Rise and Demisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A final aspect of the signaling proposition developed here is that the current international normative environment makes the positive effects of incorporating historical acknowledgment into peace negotiations more likely. Negotiations and the related cost–benefit calculations are set in an international normative environment—that is, within existing human rights norms and strengthening international norms of truth‐ and justice‐seeking (Ben‐Josef Hirsch and Dixon 2020), which supports the incorporation of human rights concerns in peace negotiations (ICHR 2006) and the use of historical acknowledgment strategies. Over the last two decades, there has been a nascent global historical justice regime, which builds on a human rights discourse that legitimizes demands for acknowledgment (Berger 2012).…”
Section: Historical Acknowledgment During Conflict Negotiationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We divide the study of SRHR robustness into two periods, 13 which are determined by US presidential terms and the release dates of EU Gender Action Plans. The latter specify the areas in which the SRHR norm is to be disseminated and identify several UN fora in which SRHR should be expanded.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%