Winner of the 2010 Best Book of the Year Award, International Studies Association! Beth Simmons argues that international human rights law has made a positive contribution to the realization of human rights in much of the world. Although governments sometimes ratify human rights treaties, gambling that they will experience little pressure to comply with them, this is not typically the case. Focusing on rights stakeholders rather than the United Nations or state pressure, Beth Simmons demonstrates through a combination of statistical analyses and case studies that the ratification of treaties leads to better rights practices on average. By several measures, civil and political rights, women's rights, a right not to be tortured in government detention, and children's rights improve, especially in the very large heterogeneous set of countries that are neither stable autocracies nor stable democracies. Simmons argues that international human rights law should get more practical and rhetorical support from the international community as a supplement to broader efforts to address conflict, development, and democratization.
"Mobilizing for Human Rights is a magisterial work of scholarship. It substantially advances our understanding of human rights law in domestic and international politics. Due to its exceptional rigor, this book will help settle some of the most highly contested debates, and will surely spark new ones. It constitutes an outstanding achievement for interdisciplinary studies."
-Ryan Goodman, New York University School of Law
"Mobilizing for Human Rights brilliantly combines theory and systematic empirical analysis to demonstrate how international human rights law affects state policies by altering the domestic political environment. Beth Simmons has written what will become a classic work integrating the study of international relations with that of domestic politics."
-Robert O. Keohane, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
"This is a very powerful study of the impact of international law and the evolution of an international human rights regime. As Simmons notes, the development of such a regime has been a major change in world politics since World War II. Her book provides one of the most well articulated theories of why the human rights regime has evolved as an international treaty system. And it presents one of the most in depth empirical studies of the major elements of that regime. It advances the novel argument that governments sign and comply with human rights treaties because they mobilize domestic groups to demand such behavior. This book will make a major contribution to our study of world politics by showing that international law can matter and that the recognition of human rights can change the behavior of governments."
-Helen V. Milner, Princeton University
"Simmons has written simply the most important new work by a social scientist on international law and human rights. This rigorous, persuasive, and theoretically eclectic book should be required reading for any scholar or graduate student interested in the topic."
-Kathryn Sikkink, University of Minnesota
"This is one of the most important books on international human rights in decades. For more than thirty years, researchers have tried unsuccessfully to use regression analysis to show that human rights treaties make a difference. In this book, Harvard Professor Beth Simmons cracks the code, developing a well-grounded theory of political contexts in which signing a human rights treaty should yield improved human rights on the ground, and then offering rigorous statistical tests that confirm the theory. This book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand when and how human rights law works."
-Professor Richard H. Steinberg, UCLA School of Law
Beth Simmons demonstrates through a combination of statistical analysis and case studies that the ratification of treaties generally leads to better human rights practices. She argues that international human rights law should get more practical and rhetorical support from the international community as a supplement to broader efforts to address conflict, development, and democratization.
Beth Simmons is Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs and Director of the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University, Massachusetts. She received her PhD from Harvard University in the Department of Government and has taught international relations, international law, and international political economy at Duke University, North Carolina, the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard University. Her book Who Adjusts? Domestic Sources of Foreign Economic Policy During the Interwar Years, 1924-1939, was recognized by the American Political Science Association in 1995 as the best book published in 1994 in government, politics, or international relations. She has worked at the International Monetary Fund with the support of a Council on Foreign Relations Fellowship (1995-6), has spent a year as a senior fellow at the United States Institute of Peace (1996-7), spent a year in residence at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University, California (2002-3), and is currently a Fellow at the Straus Institute for the Advanced Study of Law and Justice at New York University. Her new book is entitled Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic Politics (Cambridge, 2009). Simmons was elected in April 2009 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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哇,这本《Mobilizing for Human Rights》绝对是我近期读过最引人深思的书籍之一。我是在一个偶然的机会下,在一家独立书店里被它醒目的封面所吸引的。翻开扉页,就被作者那种直击人心的文字力量所震撼。这本书不仅仅是在陈述事实,它更像是和读者进行一场深入的对话,它迫使你审视自己对人权问题的看法,甚至去反思那些我们习以为常的社会结构是如何在无形中塑造了我们的观念。我特别喜欢它在叙述过程中,那种既有宏大视角又不乏细腻之处的笔触。它没有回避现实的残酷,但也没有沉溺于绝望,而是始终传递着一种积极的力量,一种“即使在最黑暗的时刻,我们依然可以行动”的信念。读完这本书,我感觉自己不再是一个旁观者,而是被赋予了一种责任感,一种想要去了解更多、去参与更多的冲动。它让我意识到,人权并非是遥不可及的抽象概念,而是与我们每个人的生活息息相关,是我们应该时刻关注并为之努力的现实议题。这本书的语言风格非常独特,有的时候像一位睿智的长者在娓娓道来,有的时候又像一位激昂的鼓动者在召唤,不同的章节,不同的论述方式,都恰到好处地抓住了读者的注意力,让人完全沉浸其中,无法自拔。
评分坦白说,当我拿起《Mobilizing for Human Rights》这本书时,并没有抱有太高的期待。我通常不太喜欢那些过于学术化或者说教意味太浓的书籍,总觉得会有一种疏离感。然而,这本书完全颠覆了我的这种预设。它以一种非常接地气的方式,将复杂的人权议题阐释得通俗易懂,却又不失深度。作者在书中巧妙地运用了大量的案例,这些案例来自世界各地,跨越不同的文化背景和历史时期,它们真实而鲜活,让我对人权所面临的挑战有了更直观的认识。我尤其欣赏作者对于“动员”这个概念的深入探讨,它不仅仅是指大规模的抗议游行,更是包含了一系列细致入微、长期坚持的努力,例如教育、倡导、法律改革,甚至是个体间的日常互动。这些看似微小的行动,在作者的笔下被赋予了巨大的能量,让我看到了改变的希望所在。这本书的结构也非常清晰,章节之间的逻辑过渡自然流畅,读起来一点也不费力。而且,它并没有试图提供一个放之四海而皆准的解决方案,而是鼓励读者根据自己的情况去思考,去寻找最适合自己的参与方式,这种开放性的态度让我觉得非常受用。
评分这本书《Mobilizing for Human Rights》绝对是我近期读到的最鼓舞人心的一本书。作者的叙述方式非常独特,他似乎总能找到一种恰到好处的语言,既能触动你最深层的情感,又能激发你最理性的思考。我在阅读的过程中,多次被书中那些鲜活的案例所吸引,它们展示了普通人在追求人权道路上所付出的努力和牺牲,以及最终取得的非凡成就。这本书让我深刻地认识到,人权并非是某个特定群体独享的特权,而是全人类共同的财富,捍卫人权是我们每一个人的责任。作者在书中对“动员”的解读非常深刻,他不仅关注大规模的集体行动,更强调了微观层面的个体力量和社群组织的重要性。这种全方位的视角,让我对如何有效推动人权事业有了更全面的认识。而且,这本书的文字流畅而富有诗意,即使在讨论那些沉重的话题时,也能感受到作者对人性光辉的赞美和对未来美好的期盼。读完这本书,我感到自己不再是孤单一人,而是与无数为正义而奋斗的人们紧密相连。
评分《Mobilizing for Human Rights》这本书给我带来的冲击是巨大的,它彻底改变了我对人权运动的理解。在此之前,我对人权运动的印象比较模糊,总觉得它们是遥远而抽象的。但这本书以一种非常具体和现实的方式,将我带入了这场关乎我们每个人的斗争之中。作者在书中探讨了多种“动员”策略,这些策略既有传统的抗议和倡导,也包括了更具创造性和地方性的方法。我特别喜欢作者在书中对不同文化背景下人权运动的分析,它展现了这场斗争的丰富性和多样性,也让我看到了不同地区人民为了自由和尊严所做的努力。这本书的写作风格非常吸引人,它既有学术的严谨,又不失文学的感染力。作者用生动的语言描绘了那些为捍卫人权而奔走呼号的人们,他们的故事充满了力量和启发。读完这本书,我感觉自己不再是一个旁观者,而是被赋予了一种责任感,一种想要去了解更多、去参与更多的冲动。它让我看到了改变的可能性,以及我们每个人在这场伟大的事业中可以扮演的角色。
评分《Mobilizing for Human Rights》这本书给我的感觉,就像是打开了一扇通往全新视野的大门。在阅读之前,我对人权运动的了解仅限于新闻报道中的一些零散信息,总觉得这是一个离我比较遥远的事情。但是,这本书以一种极其有力的方式,将我拉入了这场波澜壮阔的斗争之中。作者的写作风格非常有感染力,他能够将那些抽象的政治和法律概念,转化为生动的故事和深刻的洞见。我被书中描述的那些勇敢的个体和团体深深地打动了,他们是如何在逆境中坚持不懈,又是如何通过各种方式去争取自己和他人应有的权利。这本书让我明白了,“动员”不仅仅是一种策略,更是一种精神,一种不屈服于压迫、不放弃希望的精神。它的语言充满了力量,但又不会显得过于激进,而是一种沉稳而坚定的力量。读完之后,我感觉自己内心深处某种东西被点燃了,想要去了解更多关于这些运动背后的故事,想要去探索我能为之做些什么。这本书不仅仅是一本书,它更像是一份行动的指南,一份唤醒良知的号角。
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