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How to Influence States: Socialization and International Human Rights Law
Discusses how "regime design choices in international law turn on empirical claims about how states behave and under what condition their behavior changes." The authors suggest that states might influence other states in three ways: coercion, persuasion, and acculturation. Part of the University of Chicago Law School's Public Law and Legal Theory Working Paper series. Opens directly into a PDF file.
http://www.law.uchicago.edu/academics/publiclaw/resources/62-Jinks.pdf

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