A pdf of my manuscript with Sam R. Bell and Carla Martinez Machain, "The Effect of US Troop Deployments on Human Rights," is now available on my Research page, along with the article's online appendices and replication data. The article is forthcoming at the Journal of Conflict Resolution. Here is the abstract: U.S. non-invasion troops deployed abroad often try to promote greater respect for human rights in the host country. The host country, having an incentive to retain the troop presence, may choose to comply with these requests. We argue that this effect will not be at play in states with high security salience for the United States (for which the U.S. may not be able to credibly threaten to remove the troops). In these cases, U.S. deployments will provide the leader with security from both internal and external threats that is independent of the local population’s support for the leader. Host state leaders thus become less reliant on (and potentially less responsive to) their local populations, which in turn may lead to increased human rights violations. In this paper, we use data on both US troop deployments abroad and on human rights violations to test these arguments from 1982 to 2005.
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5/6/2024 11:36:09 pm
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AuthorK. Chad Clay ArchivesCategories |
K. Chad Clay
Associate Professor Department of International Affairs School of Public and International Affairs The University of Georgia Candler Hall Athens, GA 30602-1492 Email: [email protected] Office: 329 Candler Hall Office Phone: 706-542-9810 |