1.
Eric Posner Against Human Rights.
2.
The Rt Hon The Lord Saville of Newdigate (Chairman). Report of the The Bloody Sunday Inquiry Overall Assessment. vol. 1 Chapter 5 (Overall assessment) (2010).
3.
Danner, M. Chapter 2 - The logic of torture. in Torture and truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the war on terror 10–25 (Granta, 2004).
4.
Kelman, H. C. & Hamilton, V. The My Lai massacre: a military crime of obedience. in Crimes of obedience: toward a social psychology of authority and responsibility 1–12 (Yale University Press, 1989).
5.
Hintjens, H. Explaining the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda. The Journal of Modern African Studies, 37, 241–286 (1999).
6.
Straus, S. What Is the Relationship between Hate Radio and Violence? Rethinking Rwanda’s ‘Radio Machete’. Politics & Society 35, 609–637 (2007).
7.
Machetes and Firearms: The Organization of Massacres in Rwanda . Journal of Peace Research 43, 5–22.
8.
Bhavnani, R. Ethnic Norms and Interethnic Violence: Accounting for Mass Participation in        the Rwandan Genocide. Journal of Peace Research 43, 651–669 (2006).
9.
Lukes, S. Five fables about human rights. Dissent 427–437 (1993).
10.
Mutua, M. Savages, Vicitms and Saviours: The metaphor of human rights. Law Journal Library Harvard International Law Journal - HeinOnline.org 42, 201–246 (2001).
11.
LUKES, S. Liberal Democratic Torture. British Journal of Political Science 36, (2005).
12.
LEVEY, G. B. Beyond Durkheim: A Comment on Steven Lukes’s ‘Liberal Democratic Torture’. British Journal of Political Science 37, (2007).
13.
LUKES, S. Torture and Liberal Democracy: Response to Levey. British Journal of Political Science 37, (2007).
14.
Blitzer, W. Dershowitz: Torture could be justified. http://edition.cnn.com/2003/LAW/03/03/cnna.Dershowitz/ (2003).
15.
Julian Barnes. Even Worse Than We Thought. The New York Review of Books (2015).
16.
Snyder, T. Conclusion: Humanity. in Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin 379–408 (Bodley Head, 2010).
17.
HARFF, B. No Lessons Learned from the Holocaust? Assessing Risks of Genocide and Political Mass Murder since 1955. American Political Science Review 97, (2003).
18.
Goldhagen, D. J. Explaining the perpetrators’ actions: assessing the competing explanations. in Hitler’s willing executioners: ordinary Germans and the Holocaust 375–415 (Vintage Books, 1997).
19.
The Phoenix Effect of State Repression: Jewish Resistance during the Holocaust.
20.
Arendt, H. Chapter 6 - The final solution : killing. in Eichmann in Jerusalem: a report on the banality of evil vol. Penguin twentieth-century classics 83–111 (Penguin Books, 1994).
21.
Moravcsik, A. The Origins of Human Rights Regimes: Democratic Delegation in Postwar Europe. International Organization 54, 217–252 (2000).
22.
MORROW, J. D. When Do States Follow the Laws of War? American Political Science Review 101, (2007).
23.
Abbott, K. International Relations Theory, International Law, and the Regime Governing Atrocities in Internal Conflicts. The American Journal of International Law 93, 361–379 (1999).
24.
Poe, S. & Tate, N. Repression of Human Rights to Personal Integrity in the 1980s: A Global Analysis. JSTOR: The American Political Science Review 88, 853–872 (1994).
25.
Landman, T. The Political Science of Human Rights. British Journal of Political Science 35, 549–572 (2005).
26.
Cingranelli, D. & Filippov, M. Electoral Rules and Incentives to Protect Human Rights. The Journal of Politics 72, (2010).
27.
Milgram, S. Some conditions of obedience and disobedience to authority. Human Relations 18, 57–76 (1965).
28.
Mitchell, N. J. Agents of atrocity: leaders, followers, and the violation of human rights in civil war. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
29.
Butler, C. K., Gluch, T. & Mitchell, N. J. Security Forces and Sexual Violence: A Cross-National Analysis of a Principal Agent Argument. Journal of Peace Research 44, 669–687 (2007).
30.
Cohen, D. K. & Nordas, R. Do States Delegate Shameful Violence to Militias? Patterns of Sexual Violence in Recent Armed Conflicts. Journal of Conflict Resolution 59, 877–898 (2015).
31.
Wartime Sexual Violence: Misconceptions, Implications, and Ways Forward | United States Institute of Peace. http://www.usip.org/publications/wartime-sexual-violence-misconceptions-implications-and-ways-forward.
32.
Downes, A. Desperate Times, Desperate Measures: The Causes of Civilian Victimization in War. International Security 30, 152–195 (2006).
33.
Nah, A. M., Bennett, K., Ingleton, D. & Savage, J. A Research Agenda for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders. Journal of Human Rights Practice 5, 401–420 (2013).
34.
Hafner‐Burton, E. M. & Tsutsui, K. Human Rights in a Globalizing World: The Paradox of Empty Promises. American Journal of Sociology 110, 1373–1411 (2005).
35.
Risse, T. & Sikkink, K. The Socialisation of International Human Rights Norms into Domestic Practices: Introduction in The Power of Human Rights. in The power of human rights : international norms and domestic change 1–38 (Cambridge University Press, 1999).
36.
Risse-Kappen, T., Ropp, S. C. & Sikkink, K. The persistent power of human rights: from commitment to compliance. vol. Cambridge studies in international relations (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
37.
KRAIN, M. J’accuse! Does Naming and Shaming Perpetrators Reduce the Severity of Genocides or Politicides?1. International Studies Quarterly 56, 574–589 (2012).
38.
Meernik, J., Aloisi, R., Sowell, M. & Nichols, A. The Impact of Human Rights Organizations on Naming and Shaming Campaigns. Journal of Conflict Resolution 56, 233–256 (2012).
39.
O’hanlon, M. & Singer, P. The humanitarian transformation: expanding global intervention capacity. Survival 46, 77–99 (2004).
40.
Kuperman, A. J. The Moral Hazard of Humanitarian Intervention: Lessons from the Balkans. International Studies Quarterly 52, 49–80 (2008).
41.
Mitchell, N. J. Democracy’s blameless leaders: from Dresden to Abu Ghraib, how leaders evade accountability for abuse, atrocity, and killing. (New York University, 2012).
42.
Preventing and Responding to Dissent.
43.
Politics by Numbers.
44.
Creamer, C. D. & Simmons, B. A. Ratification, Reporting, and Rights: Quality of Participation in the Convention against Torture. Human Rights Quarterly 37, 579–608 (2015).
45.
Dancy, G. Human rights pragmatism: Belief, inquiry, and action. European Journal of International Relations (2015) doi:10.1177/1354066115600038.
46.
Dugan, L. & Chenoweth, E. Moving Beyond Deterrence: The Effectiveness of Raising the Expected Utility of Abstaining from Terrorism in Israel. American Sociological Review 77, 597–624 (2012).