How regional organizations respond to human rights: ASEAN’s ritualism in comparative perspective
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Davies, Mathew
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Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
This article builds a framework comparing how different regional organizations respond to human rights. Moving beyond Eurocentric beliefs that organizations either reject or unambiguously adopt rights, I present four categories of response: antagonism, ritualism, supportive, and embracing. I examine these categories conceptually and empirically, providing examples of how different regional organizations exemplify these categories. Next I detail how ASEAN’s approach to rights represents ritualism, combining support for human rights institutions without agreement on the moral worth of human rights. ASEAN’s ritualism is a product of the requirement to retain traditional commitments to nonintervention while responding to pressure to institutionalize human rights. Ritualism both legitimates human rights and normalizes their violation. Drawing on a comparison with the Inter-American system, I suggest three developments to ASEAN’s system that offer a plausible path for improving human rights governance in Southeast Asian regionalism without falling foul of political reality.
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Mathew Davies (2021) How regional organizations respond to human rights: ASEAN’s ritualism in comparative perspective, Journal of Human Rights, 20:2, 245-262, DOI: 10.1080/14754835.2020.1841607
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Journal of Human Rights
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2099-12-31