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International organization, 2017-04, Vol.71 (S1), p.S137-S163
2017
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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Due Deference: Cosmopolitan Social Identity and the Psychology of Legal Obligation in International Politics
Ist Teil von
  • International organization, 2017-04, Vol.71 (S1), p.S137-S163
Ort / Verlag
New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Quelle
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Why are some politicians guided by a sense of obligation toward international law but others are not? Why do some politicians have a social as opposed to an egoistic preference over compliance with international legal rules? Existing approaches largely assume that the structural features of the compliance environment shape preferences. As a result, they neglect the heterogeneity across decision makers' subjective beliefs in the legitimacy of international law, which is critical for explaining who exhibits a sense of obligation and has a non-egoistic preference for compliance. Drawing upon a large body of psychological research on social identity and influence, I argue that obligation toward international law has a behavioral foundation shaped by cosmopolitan social identity. Using data from an original survey of German politicians that includes two compliance experiments, I show that politicians with a high degree of cosmopolitanism are driven by a sense of legal obligation that results in a social preference for compliance while those low on cosmopolitanism lack the same sense of normative respect. Replicated in a second experimental study conducted with a convenience sample, my results indicate that strategic rationality in compliance applies, but only to a particular set of actors. By illuminating the psychological underpinnings of obligation toward international law, this study contributes to a richer understanding of compliance preferences and builds a bridge between instrumental and normative models.

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