Authors
Tara J Melish
Publication date
2009
Journal
Yale J. Int'l L.
Volume
34
Pages
389
Description
It is frequently said that the United States has a paradoxical human rights policy. 2 On the one hand, the United States embraces human rights principles as a founding national ideology, 3 and has supported the enhancement of human rights and democracy as a core premise of its foreign policy since the end of the Second World War, when it played a leading role in birthing the international human rights regime. 4 Indeed, the promotion of human rights and democracy abroad is a central motivating tenet of US foreign policy, manifested in the nation's extensive foreign assistance commitments, political and financial support of international human rights bodies, linking of bilateral aid to human rights improvements, and annual reporting on the human rights situation of 194 nations of the world. 5 National public opinion polls, moreover, suggest that roughly eighty percent of Americans believe that human rights inhere in …
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