4 - Backlash Against Human Rights Courts Flashcards
Key element to take into account when invoking the notion of backlash? (3)
1/ notion is highly contested
2/ no single accepted definition
3/ link between backlash and resistance towards int. courts
How does Voeten define backlash? (3)
1/ gvt actions
2/ aimed at curbing or reversing
3/ authority of an int. court
What are the different types of backlash according to Voeten? (3)
1/ against a court’s general authority (obstruction)
2/ against a court’s authority over an individual country (withdraw or threat)
3/ through critique (falling short of withdrawal threats)
What is the difference between backlash and pushback? (4)
1/ pushback seeks to influence the future direction of an institution’s jurisprudence
2/ backlash is a form of extraordinary critique that calls for withdrawal/dismantling/significant reform of an int. court
3/ so qualitative difference in the level of critique
4/ Madsen
What is the commonality between backlash and pushback? (2)
1/ both relate to forms of resistance
2/ focus is on reversal
What are some specific triggers of backlash against int. courts? (2)
1/ implementation costs
2/ political benefits
What does the notion of implementation costs cover? (5)
1/ not only financial costs
2/ sovereignty costs
3/ regime costs
4/ adaptation costs
5/ rational-choice-logic determinations
What is a prominent example of political benefits as a trigger of backlash?
The Populist turn
What are the main characteristics of populism? (3)
1/ many varieties
2/ commonality is that politics should be an expression of the will of the ‘pure people’ (as opposed to corrupt elites)
3/ identity politics
What is the difference between Latin American and European populism? (2)
1/ LA : distributional
2/ EUR : identity based
Why can populism lead to backlash?
Rulings of int. courts often protect elites or minorities, i.e. groups who are targets of populist ire
Why do populists target domestic and int. courts? (4)
1/ int. courts are central to the liberal int. order
2/ populists object to court rulings that interfere with domestic populist narratives about whose rights deserve to be protected
3/ backlash may be politically advantageous & often accompanies curtailing of domestic judiciary
4/ backlash rather a strategy than an outcome
What are some of the issues at the centre of backlashes (Voeten)? (3)
1/ redistribution of land rights (espec in AFR)
2/ opposition to neoliberal policies (LatAmer. backlash against WB and IMF)
3/ protection of “unpopular” minorities (UK pirsoner’s voting rights)
What are 3 forms of resistance according to Madsen et al.?
1/ judicial functioning
2/ institutional set-up
3/ negative public discourse
What relationship did Voeten reveal between populism and backlash? (3)
1/ examine 28 examples of backlash since 1990
2/ 18 of 28 were from populist govts
3/ this was based on conservative definition of ‘populist’