Davies, Mathew
Description
The study of how regional communities socialise human rights via membership
has long been wedded to the detailed focus on the European Union (EU) as the
most prominent example of that phenomenon. However, this over focus has
unbalanced studies of how regional communities, membership and socialisation
intersect, and the over concentration on a single atypical case has created an
unhealthy preoccupation with notions of conditionality. This work corrects this
myopia through a focus on the...[Show more] ASEAN relationship with Myanmar and the
Organization of American States (OAS) relationship with Panama, as well as the
EU relationship with Turkey.
A comparative investigation of how membership, regional communities and
socialisation interact provides not only empirical novelty, but requires innovative
methodologies and theoretical frameworks. Methodologically, this study rests on
the move towards analytical eclecticism already well established in the discipline
more broadly. However, to do justice to the extended range of empirical studies,
this work moves the foundations of this eclecticism into how we define norms
and socialisation. To investigate the shortcomings of unreconstructed eclectic
efforts, and to suggest new ways forward, this study rests on a Critical Realist
definitional framework, shifting the foundations of studying socialisation to a
post positivist premise. Based upon this, the theoretical framework presents
rational choice and constructivist accounts of socialisation embedded in an
empirically rich analysis along the spectrum of membership, running from
applying to a regional community through to maintaining that right once
achieved.
The combination of empirical, methodological and theoretical innovations
suggests a sequence of conclusions. Different types of regional community
present different socialisation mechanisms, in different combinations and with
different stories of success and failure. Rationalist explanations are revealed to
be only part of the socialisation jigsaw when the EU is compared to different
examples. Whilst always present, rationally construable processes are potentially
joined by member-states pushing forwards their own agendas via the community
membership process. Extending our analysis into socialisation once a member
reveals the significance of community building dynamics. Community building
creates rich discursive environments, where potential future plans compete with
each other for dominance. Revising standards also creates the possibility of
Social Sanction, Rhetorical Action and Naming and Shaming. The ultimate
success or failure of these socialisation efforts rest on a combination of the
strength of the norm in question, the mechanisms by which it is promoted and
protected and a broader impression that those standards are meant to be binding
in the real world.
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