POLS 1301 Lecture Notes - Lecture 27: Due Process
Document Summary
: international norms refer standards of behavior defined in terms of rights and obligations; typically informal. Types of international norms: constitutive: domestic political area, rules of the constitutive game. Decides who is legitimate or appropriate actor under what circumstances: procedural: what action follow. Defines how decision involving multiple actors should be made. Usually well structured: regulative: regulate the behavior, often prohibit the action. Govern the behavior of actors in their interactions with other actors. : the tipping point is the point at which a critical mass of relevant state actors adopt the norm t0 t1 t2. Tans promote norms that change how we as individuals or countries conceive our interests. A transnational advocacy network consists a set of relevant organizations working internationally with shared values, a common discourse, and dense exchanges of information. Shape definitions of what is appropriate or right via framing and naming and shaming.