Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1289Hits:19841363Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID186731
Title ProperImagining a World without the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
LanguageENG
AuthorGinsburg, Tom ;  Elkins, Zachary
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is thought to have shaped constitutions profoundly since its adoption in 1948. The authors identify two empirical implications that should follow from such influence. First, UDHR content should be reflected in subsequent national constitutions. Second, such reflections should bear the particular marks of the UDHR itself, not those of the postwar zeitgeist more broadly. The authors examine the historical evidence at various levels to identify and untangle the UDHR's impact. In a macro analysis, they leverage an original data set on the content of constitutions since 1789. They explore historical patterns in the creation and spread of rights, and test whether 1948 exhibits a noticeable disruption in rights provision. The authors build a multivariate model that predicts rights provision with constitution- and rights-level covariates. To gain further analytic leverage, they unearth the process that produced the UDHR and identify plausible alternative formulations evident in a set of discarded proposals. The authors further test the plausibility of UDHR influence by searching for direct references to the document in subsequent constitutional texts and constitutional proceedings. The evidence suggests that the UDHR significantly accelerated the adoption of a particular set of constitutional rights.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Politics Vol. 74, No.3; Jul 2022: p.327 - 366
Journal SourceWorld Politics Vol: 74 No 3
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  Treaties ;  Constitutions ;  Diffusion ;  Universal Declaration of Human Rights ;  Critical Juncture ;  United Nations


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text