Browsing by Author "Kelley, Judith"
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Item Open Access Amicable Contempt: The Strategic Balance between Dictators and International NGOs(2017) Heiss, AndrewOver the past decade, international nongovernmental organizations (INGOs) have become increasingly active in authoritarian regimes as they respond to emergencies, assist with development, or advocate for human rights. Though these services and advocacy can challenge the legitimacy and power of the regime, many autocratic states permit INGO activities, and INGOs continue to work in these countries despite heavy restrictions on their activities. In this dissertation, I theorize that the relationship between INGOs and autocrats creates a state of amicable contempt, where each party is aware that the other both threatens and supports their existence. After outlining the theory, I explore the factors that determine when autocracies will constrict the legal environment for INGOs through de jure anti-NGO laws and the discretionary implementation of those laws. I combine a set of statistical models run on a cross-sectional dataset of 100 autocracies between 1991–2014 with case studies of Egypt, Russia, and China to test the effect of internal risk, external threats, and reputational concerns on the de facto civil society regulatory environment. I find that autocracies constrict civil society regulations in response to domestic instability and as regimes become more stable and cohesive. I also find that autocracies constrict civil society regulations in response to external threats to the regime, including the pressures of globalization. I find no evidence of an effect from reputational concerns. I then use results from a global survey of 641 INGOs to test the determinants of international NGO behavior. I find that the conflict between principles and instrumental concerns shapes INGO behavior and influences its relationship to its host government. Finally, I combine the survey results with case studies of four INGOs—Article 19, AMERA International, Index on Censorship, and the International Republican Institute—to analyze how INGOs respond to two forms of government regulation. When facing gatekeeping restrictions designed limit access to the country, I find that INGOs rely on their programmatic flexibility to creatively work around those restrictions. When facing restrictions aimed at capturing INGO programs, organizations rely on their programmatic flexibility to protect against changes to their core principles and mission.
Item Open Access Assessing the Evaluation Methods of the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s Latin American Compact Projects(2020-11-20) Norman, SavannahPor décadas, agencias de desarrollo internacional se han esforzado para remediar los desafíos globales del desarrollo. Una de estas agencias es el Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC). Este trabajo explora la programación del Millennium Challenge Coporation a través de sus evaluaciones. Específicamente, este trabajo evalúa la solidez técnica de las evaluaciones de los proyectos hondureñas, nicaragüenses, y salvadoreños del MCC, y también lo que los hallazgos y la solidez de estas evaluaciones significan para futuros proyectos en la región. A través de un análisis de documentos, este trabajo encontró que la evaluación promedia fue sólida técnicamente, como uso métricas consistentes, apropiadas, y objetivas. Sin embargo, la estructura de las evaluaciones varió según el autor y la agencia propietaria. Evaluaciones externas no directamente contradijeron los hallazgos de las evaluaciones financiadas por el MCC. Las evaluaciones no fueron inclusivas a los destinatarios originarios de la programación del MCC, los grupos beneficiarios. Entrevistas con los autores de las evaluaciones confirmaron estas conclusiones. Las implicaciones de estos hallazgos incluyen la importancia de procesos de desarrollo que son culturalmente competentes, inclusivos, multifacéticos, y que asimilan el aprendizaje de proyectos ya-completados. Los hallazgos de este trabajo se aplican al proceso de desarrollo y evaluación de Latinoamérica.Item Open Access Assessing the Evaluation Methods of the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s Latin American Compact Projects(2020-11-20) Norman, SavannahInternational development agencies have, for decades, worked to remedy global development challenges. One of these agencies is the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC). This study explores the MCC’s Latin American programming via its evaluations. It specifically assesses the technical soundness of the MCC’s Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador evaluations, as well what the findings and soundness of evaluations mean for future projects in the region. Through document analysis, this study found that the average evaluation was technically sound, as it employed consistent, appropriate, and objective metrics. However, evaluation structure varied according to author and proprietor agency. External evaluations did not directly contradict the findings of MCC-sponsored evaluations. Evaluations were not inclusive to the intended recipients of MCC programming, beneficiary groups. Interviews with the authors of evaluations confirmed these findings. The implications of findings include the importance of culturally competent, inclusive, and multi-faceted development processes that assimilate learning from prior programming. Findings are applicable to development and evaluation processes in Latin America.Item Open Access Coverage of Burma in Six Elite Newspapers(2011-12-09) Fairchild, CarolineThis project compares the United States, United Kingdom and Thailand’s print media coverage of Burma. Examining six newspapers’ coverage of Burma in 2008 and 2010, the project studies how newspapers frame Burma differently in international coverage. For each newspaper, news coverage of Burma is driven by politics, with an emphasis on the political role of Aung San Suu Kyi. Aside from instances when a specific event demands international engagement with Burma, news organizations rely on policy elites to reduce the cost of reporting news about Burma.Item Open Access Differences in the Media’s Framing of Fracking/Shale Gas in New York, Pennsylvania, Germany, and the United Kingdom(2014-04-25) Beresford, HenryOver the past decade, commercial mining firms in the United States have increasingly used horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing (fracking) to extract natural gas from shale rock formations (shale gas). The production of shale gas in the United States is booming: according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the percentage of U.S. domestic natural gas withdrawals from shale gas increased from 8.1% to 34.9% between 2007 and 2012, and U.S. wellhead natural gas prices dropped 57%. In contrast, Europe has not yet begun to produce shale gas on a commercial scale, even though EU natural gas prices are multiple times’ more expensive than U.S. natural gas prices. Others have proposed various historic, economic, political, and geologic reasons for this disparity, but comparatively little attention has been paid to the hypothesis that differences in news coverage may have contributed to disparity, or even towards describing differences in news coverage. The question remains: have European news media outlets framed shale gas any differently than American news media outlets? This paper presents the results of an original, preliminary inquiry into whether there exist differences in media framing of the shale gas/fracking in the U.S. versus the EU. A content analysis was performed on a representative sample of 712 fracking-related or shale gas-related texts from eight newspapers in New York, Pennsylvania, Germany, and the United Kingdom. All texts were published between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2013. Ultimately, this study found significant differences in framing between the newspapers when analyzed individually (p<0.01) and when grouped by state (p<0.1). However, no significant differences in media frames were found between the shale-gas friendly jurisdictions (Pennsylvania & the United Kingdom) compared to shale-gas hostile jurisdictions (New York & Germany). Despite greater shale gas production in the U.S., the four U.S. papers on the whole were found to have presented a more negative frame towards shale gas than the four European newspapers (p<0.1). These results provide evidence that media coverage of shale gas varies strongly by state and local jurisdictions, suggest that U.S. and EU media representations of shale gas are more similar than a casual observer might guess, and indicate that grand generalizations about media representations of shale gas in the U.S. and the EU are to be avoided.Item Open Access Exploration of Multiple Perceived Obstacles to Abortion Access for Women in North Carolina(2019-12-06) Jaffe, StephanieExisting research shows that legislation such as mandatory waiting periods, restriction of federal funding to pay for abortion services, and regulations causing clinic closures can make it more difficult for women to get an abortion. In 2019, North Carolina was one of the 29 states in the US considered to be extremely hostile to abortion rights based on legislative abortion restrictions, and in 2014, 90% of women in North Carolina had no clinics that provided abortions in their counties. Thus, women in North Carolina are likely to experience many challenges in attaining abortions. This qualitative study of multiple obstacles to abortion among a sample of women in North Carolina adds to existing literature on the impact of obstacles to accessing abortion by assessing the cumulative effect of multiple obstacles on women’s perceptions of obtaining an abortion. I collected survey data and conducted qualitative interviews with women in North Carolina who had recently received an abortion and analyzed this data to find four key themes in women’s experiences: cost obstacles, logistical obstacles, access to information, and personal/emotional obstacles. These themes reveal that multiple obstacles experienced at once interact to influence women’s perceptions of their experiences in getting abortions, and that these experiences vary based on external factors, such as income, profession, upbringing, and support networks. This research demonstrates the importance of highlighting women’s narratives when advocating changes in abortion policy.Item Open Access Flying Blind? Implementing a Trauma-Informed Care Approach in the Treatment of Trafficking Survivors(2018-12-05) Downey, CaraMillions of people are exploited for labor or sex throughout the world. Governments and non-profit organizations have increasingly explored how to best help trafficking survivors overcome their adversity through services such as counseling, job assistance, financial assistance, family reunification, and housing. However, there are few evidence-based practices for how to best care for trafficking survivors due to transitory contact between survivors and care providers, a lack of organizational capacity for research, and the need to not withhold potentially beneficial treatment from any survivor. In 2018, the United States Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons suggested that one best practice is using trauma-informed care (TIC) due to survivors’ likelihood of having experienced complex trauma. This study examines 18 anti-trafficking organization employees’ perceptions and use of TIC in the treatment of trafficking survivors through interviews. A meta-analysis of research about the best practices of meeting the mental health needs of survivors shows in what ways providers using TIC to meet survivors’ mental health needs are not flying blind, but rather using evidence-based practices. A meta-analysis of research about the mental health needs of trafficking survivors is used to further develop providers’ understanding of survivors’ mental health needs and identify areas for further research.Item Open Access How can the private sector effectively partner with civil society to promote good governance in Kenya?(2013-04-18) Obonyo, RaphaelThe purpose of this study was to examine private sector-civil society partnerships. The literature section focuses on factors that make partnerships work. The study also examines two joint advocacy projects that KEPSA has implemented together with civil society in Kenya-the Mkenya Daima /My Kenya campaign, and the Community Empowerment to Access and Demand Justice project (CEADJ). In particular, the study looks at three aspects of KEPSA-civil society partnerships. The first aspect is the quality of the partnership in terms of existing capacity and interest alignment. Second is the success of the partnerships in implementing planned activities. The third aspect is the success of the joint projects in terms of impact. Also, the study suggests strategies that KEPSA could apply to build effective partnerships with the civil society.Item Open Access NGO Outreach for Early Recovery: Strategies for Improved Coordination and Implementation of the Early Recovery Approach(2014-04-30) Honick, Rachael ElizabethThe Cluster Working Group on Early Recovery (CWGER) is the United Nations global Working Group tasked to integrate Early Recovery into the international humanitarian architecture. As part of their outreach campaign, the CWGER commissioned a report to analyze the extent to which selected humanitarian INGOs integrated aspects of the Early Recovery approach during the 2010 flood response in Pakistan. The CWGER requested an analysis of INGO programs, with explicit interest regarding the planning, coordinating and transition processes each INGO applied during the relief phase of the response. In addition, the CWGER wanted to know the extent to which the selected INGOs integrated elements of the Early Recovery approach into their planning and coordination processes. The CWGER hopes to use the information provided in this report to learn how best to engage and collaborate with INGOs before and during humanitarian crises. Furthermore, the CWGER hopes to use the recommendations included in this report to determine what feasible measures it can or should take to support the selected INGOs in their efforts to integrate Early Recovery in their programs before and during a crisis.Item Open Access Nil Points, Douze Points, and Everything In Between: An Analysis of Political Voting Bias in the Eurovision Song Contest(2013-04-12) Boulos, AnnaMost viewers assume voting in the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) is politically motivated, but few empirical studies have addressed political voting bias. If these claims have any validity then Eurovision voting results would provide meaningful insight into European public opinion and the degree of assimilation amongst contest participants. This study examines political voting bias by estimating what predicts votes from participating countries across voting systems using data from 1989 – 2012, as well as numerous song, performance, and country variables. The findings suggest voting is politically biased, although song popularity is significant and predictive of voting behavior. The results further indicate that contest participants form into smaller regional voting blocs and are statistically likely to vote for their neighbors. This study supports the claims of political voting and that Eurovision voting patterns are meaningful indicators of public opinion and inter-regional relations.Item Open Access One-size-fits-all? Evaluating the Global Compact on Refugees in Serbia(2018-12-05) Park, YoungOn September 19, 2016, the United Nations General Assembly Member States unanimously passed the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. The Declaration renews the global community's commitment to respect the human rights of refugees and migrants and makes plans for the development and release of two global compacts delineating that commitment - one on migrants and one on refugees. This study focuses on the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR), providing a preliminary evaluation of effectiveness by examining how compatible the GCR is with the current refugee conditions in Serbia.Item Open Access Teaching English Language Learners: A Comparison of Dual Immersion and English as a Second Language Programs(2011-12) Harless, ErinThis paper compares two different programs designed to teach Spanish-speaking English Language Learners (ELLs). The first, English as a Second Language (ESL), utilizes English-only instruction to facilitate English acquisition, while the second, Dual Immersion, provides instruction in both Spanish and English in order to promote comprehension of curriculum. Based on conceptual arguments in the literature regarding ELLs, I hypothesize that Dual Immersion programs are at least as effective, and likely more effective, than ESL programs in promoting the academic and social success of ELLs. To examine this hypothesis, I conduct a formal literature review of the existing research on Dual Immersion programs, as well as a case study of an elementary school with both programs in Siler City, North Carolina. Although the methodology contains limitations, the evidence is consistent with my original hypothesis.Item Open Access The Conservatization of the 386 Generation: Cohort Effects in Voting Behavior of a political Generation in South Korea(2011-05-03) Park, JaehooExecutive Summary This study concentrates on the research question that whether the 386 Generation maintain its cohort effects. The 386 Generation was coined in the 1990s to describe those Koreans in their 30s who were born in the 1960s and entered the university in the 1980s. This political generation is known as liberal and they are considered to maintain its liberalism because they spent most of their 20s fighting against authoritarian rule and shared common sentiment in favor of democracy. It seems that they have shown their liberalism through a series of elections, especially in 2002. However, in 2007, their support for the non-conservatives decreases remarkably, which arouses a suspicion on their liberalism and cohort effects. In order to figure out cohort effects of the 386 Generation, this study set Korean generations into five categories by 10 years, and recode the party identification into two groups: the conservatives and the non-conservatives. Logistic regressions with the voting choice variable as a dependent variable and OLS regression with the ideology variable as a dependent variable are implemented. The control variables include sex, income, degree of education, occupations, regions of the origin and generations. The previous election result, self-reported ideology and their interaction term with the generations are respectively added in each model. This study uses 1992, 1997, 2002, and 2007 Korean Presidential Election Study(KPES) cross-sectional data from the Institute for Korean Election Studies. The survey were conducted by the Korea Social Science Data Center using face-to-face interview with approximately 1,200 voters right after each election. This study could not find any evidence for cohort effects of the 386 Generation. The 386 Generation maintains consistent low probability of voting choice for the non-conservatives, and even shows lower support for the non-conservatives in 2007. Decreasing gap with the Industrialization Generation and insignificant and statistically insignificant result of the interaction term between the previous election and the 386 Generation are other evidence that the 386 Generation does not maintain its cohort effects. Therefore, when it is compared to other generations, the 386 Generation become also conservative like other generations, without cohort effects.Item Open Access THE PRECEDENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE IN THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNAL FOR RWANDA(2017-04-12) White, ElizabethFollowing the 1994 Rwandan genocide against the Tutsi ethnic group, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) was established to prosecute those most responsible for their violations of international law. The Tribunal marked the first prosecution of the crime of genocide. The unprecedented nature of the prosecution of the crime resulted in initial inconsistencies and a lack of clarity of the definition. This study examined the evolution of the legal definition for the crime of genocide through qualitative analyses of the trial documents in selected case studies from the ICTR, as well as subsequent cases of the prosecution of genocide outside of the jurisdiction of the Tribunal. The cases highlighted a convergence over time for the establishment of group definition, intent, and witness credibility across cases in the Tribunal, with a diminishing role for witness testimonies in later cases of genocide. The eventual coherent and clear application of the definition for the crime of genocide in the ICTR provides valuable precedent for the potential of faster, more consistent future prosecutions of crimes of genocide. In their slight divergence from the ICTR’s precedent, however, later cases of genocide demonstrate the necessity of considering of the work of international courts.