7/2012 Knop, “International Law and the Disaggregated Democratic State: Two Case-Studies on Women’s Human Rights and the United States”

View & Download Paper: Knop, “International Law and the Disaggregated Democratic State”

ABSTRACT:

The two United States case studies in this paper demonstrate that whether or not a state is party to a particular treaty, in a disaggregated democratic state both the central government and different parts of the state have a remarkable range of possibilities for configuring their law and politics around that treaty and thereby configuring the contours of the state internationally.  The cases center on women’s human rights: San Francisco’s “implementation” of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), despite the fact that the United States is not a party; and the work of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), an independent bi-partisan federal agency which advises the President on sanctioning other countries for severe violations of the international right to religious freedom and is increasingly taking on issues of women’s equality in that context.

The paper shows that the normative effects produced by San Francisco’s CEDAW initiative are not well captured by existing schematic approaches to the behaviour of sub-state actors, which tend to apply either a linear measure of compliance with international law or some general idea about good and/or bad local variation.  Applying a more ethnographic alertness to mutation and transposition, the analysis reveals that in the case of USCIRF as well, the result is both under- and ultra-compliance as these sub-state actors transform the substantive content of the treaty.   The hallmark of both cases, however, proves to be more the replication of the treaty’s form than the application of its substance.

KEYWORDS: human rights; gender; United States

About the Author:
Karen Knop is a Professor of Law at the University of Toronto.  An earlier version of this paper was presented at the conference “We, the Peoples: Engagement and Participation in Government” held at Victoria University of Wellington Law Faculty/New Zealand Centre for Public Law.  This paper is dedicated to Martha Morgan with admiration and affection.

4/2011: Sandra K. Soto, “Wearing Out Arizona”

View & Download Paper: Soto, “Wearing Out Arizona”

ABSTRACT:

In “Wearing Out Arizona,” Sandra K. Soto describes and analyzes what her colleague K. Tsianina Lomawaima has aptly coined Arizona’s “regressive suite of legislation.” Seeking to further marginalize the growing Latino community in the state (especially the foreign born), these laws and bills curtail mobility, solidarity, education, and even Constitutional rights. Focusing on the neoliberal state’s strategy of enforcement through attrition, Soto suggests that these laws—SB 1070 and HB 2281 in particular—reinforce one another in ways that create “dead citizenship” and a “wearing out” of critique. Even those of us on the left who are able to identify this deadening and who seek to resist it find it difficult to continue to speak out and do more than participate in the pablum of acceptable phrases. Against the strategy of attrition—which entails the weakening of a people incrementally over a span of time, until they have finally been worn down, worn out, erased—Soto calls for a new politics of sustenance, collaboration, the collecting and sharing of resources.

Keywords: Arizona; neoliberalism; SB 1070 (immigration); HB 2281 (ethnic studies); attrition


RESUMEN:

En “Wearing Out Arizona,” Sandra K. Soto describe y analisa lo que su colega K. Tsianina Lomawaima llama “el conjunto regressivo de legislación” de Arizona. Buscando marginalizar todavía más la comunidad Latina creciente en el estado (especialmente los que han nascido en el extranjero), dichas leyes y proyectos de ley disminuyen la movilidad, solidaridad, educación, y mismo derechos constitucionales. Enfocándose en la estrategia del estado neoliberal de ejecución de normas a través de atrito, Soto sugiere que dichas leyes – SB 170 y HB 2281 en particular – refórzanse mutuamente en formas que crean “ciudadanías muertas” y un “desgaste” de la crítica. Mismo aquellos en la izquierda quienes podemos identificar esta muerte y que buscamos resistirla creemos difícil continuar a pronunciarnos y hacer más que participar en el pablum de frases aceptables. En contra la estrategia de atrito – que exige la debilitación de un pueblo crecientemente en un periodo de tiempo, hasta que ellos estén vencidos, desgastados, borrados – Soto clama por una nueva estrategia de sostenimiento, colaboración, la colección y compartimiento de recursos.

Palabras claves: Arizona; neoliberalismo; SB 1070 (inmigración); HB 2281 (estudios étnicos); atrito

Author’s Contact Information:
Sandra K. Soto,  sotos at email.arizona.edu