Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries

It is generally held that economic sanctions have an adverse effect on human rights in sanctioned countries, but what about the non-sanctioned countries? Previous research has found that human rights sanctions appear to have a deterring effect on non-sanctioned countries in Latin America which, in t...

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Main Author: Christopher, Wahlsten
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen 2018
Subjects:
PTS
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-352167
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-3521672018-06-03T05:24:14ZEconomic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned CountriesengChristopher, WahlstenUppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen2018human rightssanctionsunintended consequencesregional emulationdifference-in-differencesCIRIPTSPolitical ScienceStatsvetenskapOther HumanitiesAnnan humanioraOther Social SciencesAnnan samhällsvetenskapIt is generally held that economic sanctions have an adverse effect on human rights in sanctioned countries, but what about the non-sanctioned countries? Previous research has found that human rights sanctions appear to have a deterring effect on non-sanctioned countries in Latin America which, in turn, led to human rights improvements. The assumption from these findings suggests that countries improve their human rights in fear of being sanctioned themselves. Utilising a difference-in-differences method with data from CIRI and PTS for the time period 1977-1996, the present quasi-experimental study attempts to test these findings on Africa and Asia by posing the hypothesis that economic sanctions improve the level of human rights protection in the non-sanctioned countries of the same geographical region. The results show that, while there appears to be a positive effect on some measures of human rights in non-sanctioned countries, these effects are weak. Moreover, the results also show that the improvements correspond with the number of years following a sanction, where 1 year displays the weakest human rights improvements, whilst 10 years displays the strongest. The conclusion is that there, in some cases, appears to be a modest effect which needs to be examined further, but that sanctions, nevertheless, do not improve human rights in neighbouring countries in a meaningful way. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-352167application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic human rights
sanctions
unintended consequences
regional emulation
difference-in-differences
CIRI
PTS
Political Science
Statsvetenskap
Other Humanities
Annan humaniora
Other Social Sciences
Annan samhällsvetenskap
spellingShingle human rights
sanctions
unintended consequences
regional emulation
difference-in-differences
CIRI
PTS
Political Science
Statsvetenskap
Other Humanities
Annan humaniora
Other Social Sciences
Annan samhällsvetenskap
Christopher, Wahlsten
Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
description It is generally held that economic sanctions have an adverse effect on human rights in sanctioned countries, but what about the non-sanctioned countries? Previous research has found that human rights sanctions appear to have a deterring effect on non-sanctioned countries in Latin America which, in turn, led to human rights improvements. The assumption from these findings suggests that countries improve their human rights in fear of being sanctioned themselves. Utilising a difference-in-differences method with data from CIRI and PTS for the time period 1977-1996, the present quasi-experimental study attempts to test these findings on Africa and Asia by posing the hypothesis that economic sanctions improve the level of human rights protection in the non-sanctioned countries of the same geographical region. The results show that, while there appears to be a positive effect on some measures of human rights in non-sanctioned countries, these effects are weak. Moreover, the results also show that the improvements correspond with the number of years following a sanction, where 1 year displays the weakest human rights improvements, whilst 10 years displays the strongest. The conclusion is that there, in some cases, appears to be a modest effect which needs to be examined further, but that sanctions, nevertheless, do not improve human rights in neighbouring countries in a meaningful way.
author Christopher, Wahlsten
author_facet Christopher, Wahlsten
author_sort Christopher, Wahlsten
title Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
title_short Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
title_full Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
title_fullStr Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
title_full_unstemmed Economic Sanctions as an Indirect Regional Threat : The Regional Impact of Sanctions on the Level of Human Rights Protection in Non-sanctioned Countries
title_sort economic sanctions as an indirect regional threat : the regional impact of sanctions on the level of human rights protection in non-sanctioned countries
publisher Uppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen
publishDate 2018
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-352167
work_keys_str_mv AT christopherwahlsten economicsanctionsasanindirectregionalthreattheregionalimpactofsanctionsonthelevelofhumanrightsprotectioninnonsanctionedcountries
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