Replication Data for: Do Americans Support War Crimes Prosecutions?
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Do Americans support war crimes investigations and prosecutions? Historically, the United States has considered itself a torchbearer of international criminal justice, leading the establishment of tribunals in Nuremberg, Tokyo, the Hague, and Arusha. The United States even participated in the drafting of the Rome Statute, which established the International Criminal Court (ICC). Yet the nation was not a subject of an international criminal tribunal – until the ICC's Afghanistan investigation, which covers, among others, the Afghan National Security Forces, the Taliban, and U.S. military and intelligence personnel. Previous scholarship shows Americans support the ICC and U.S. membership. However, almost all of this research precedes the Afghanistan investigation, leaving open two important questions: (1) to what extent does the U.S. public support ICC investigations and possible prosecutions of U.S. personnel and (2) what discursive frames (i.e., arguments) support or undermine the ICC's work? Extending research on U.S. foreign policy public opinion, we evaluate the proposition that human rights arguments will increase and national interest arguments will decrease support for the ICC's work in Afghanistan. We test this proposition using an online survey experiment. The upshot is Americans are fairly fixed in their opinions and the vast majority support investigations and prosecutions.
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Metrics Over Time
Publication Details
Subfield
Political Science and International Relations
Field
Social Sciences
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
46%
Source
Scholar Data Model