Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2013
Existing compliance research has focused on states’ adherence to international rules. This article reports on state and also non-state actors’ adherence to international norms. The analysis of warring parties’ behaviour in granting the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) access to detention centres between 1991 and 2006 shows that both governments and rebel groups adhere to the norm of accepting the ICRC in order to advance their pursuit of legitimacy. National governments are more likely to grant access when they are democracies and rely on foreign aid. Insurgent groups are more likely to grant access when they exhibit legitimacy-seeking characteristics, such as having a legal political wing, relying on domestic support, controlling territory and receiving transnational support.
Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University (email: hyeranjo@polisci.tamu.edu); and Strategy and Security Institute, University of Exeter (email: c.p.thomson@exeter.ac.uk), respectively. The authors acknowledge financial support from the Scowcroft Institute at the Bush School of Government and Public Service. They would like to thank the participants of ‘From Commitment to Compliance: The Persistent Power of Human Rights’ workshop (Berlin, 2010) for early feedback on this work. Special thanks are due to Tanja Börzel, Thomas Risse, Katherine Sikkink and Beth Simmons. For helpful discussions, the authors thank Katherine Bryant, Nisha Fazal, Nehemia Geva, Mike Koch, Quan Li, Cliff Morgan, James Morrow, Idean Salehyan and Ahmer Tarar. The authors are also indebted to one of the Editors, Kristian Gleditsch, and the four anonymous reviewers for their detailed and insightful comments, from which this article has greatly benefited. An online appendix is available at http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1017/S0007123412000749. Data replication set available at: http://www-polisci.tamu.edu/faculty/jo/
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