Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships

The empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of democracy; (2) the proliferation and effectiveness of human rights law; and (3) the causes and consequences of h...

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Main Author: Todd Landman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2018-03-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1186
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spelling doaj-77d16561d4c74e17b2665b24b377d4eb2020-11-24T22:08:07ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632018-03-0161485910.17645/pag.v6i1.1186660Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and RelationshipsTodd Landman0School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham, UKThe empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of democracy; (2) the proliferation and effectiveness of human rights law; and (3) the causes and consequences of human rights across many of their categories and dimensions. This work has in many ways overcome the ‘essentially contested’ nature of the concepts of democracy and human rights conceptually, established different measures of both empirically, and developed increasingly sophisticated statistical and other analytical techniques to provide stronger inferences for the academic and policy community. This article argues that despite these many achievements, there remain tensions between conceptualisations of democracy and human rights over the degree to which one includes the other, the temporal and spatial empirical relationships between them, and the measures that have been developed to operationalize them. These tensions, in turn, affect the kinds of analyses that are carried out, including model specification, methods of estimation, and findings. Drawing on extant theories and measures of both, the article argues that there must be greater specificity in the conceptualisation and operationalization of democracy and human rights, greater care in the development and use of measures, and greater attention to the kinds of inferences that are made possible by them.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1186administrative databig datademocracyevents datahuman rightsmeasurementsocio-economicstandards datastatisticssurvey data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Todd Landman
spellingShingle Todd Landman
Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
Politics and Governance
administrative data
big data
democracy
events data
human rights
measurement
socio-economic
standards data
statistics
survey data
author_facet Todd Landman
author_sort Todd Landman
title Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
title_short Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
title_full Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
title_fullStr Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
title_full_unstemmed Democracy and Human Rights: Concepts, Measures, and Relationships
title_sort democracy and human rights: concepts, measures, and relationships
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2018-03-01
description The empirical literature on democracy and human rights has made great strides over the last 30 years in explaining (1) the variation in the transition to, consolidation of, and quality of democracy; (2) the proliferation and effectiveness of human rights law; and (3) the causes and consequences of human rights across many of their categories and dimensions. This work has in many ways overcome the ‘essentially contested’ nature of the concepts of democracy and human rights conceptually, established different measures of both empirically, and developed increasingly sophisticated statistical and other analytical techniques to provide stronger inferences for the academic and policy community. This article argues that despite these many achievements, there remain tensions between conceptualisations of democracy and human rights over the degree to which one includes the other, the temporal and spatial empirical relationships between them, and the measures that have been developed to operationalize them. These tensions, in turn, affect the kinds of analyses that are carried out, including model specification, methods of estimation, and findings. Drawing on extant theories and measures of both, the article argues that there must be greater specificity in the conceptualisation and operationalization of democracy and human rights, greater care in the development and use of measures, and greater attention to the kinds of inferences that are made possible by them.
topic administrative data
big data
democracy
events data
human rights
measurement
socio-economic
standards data
statistics
survey data
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/1186
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