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Deviant and Over-Compliance: The Domestic Politics of Child Labor in Bolivia and Argentina
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Citations
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2017
Year
Latin American StudyLawSocial ChangeDomestic PoliticsSocial SciencesLabour StudyHuman Rights PrinciplesLatin American SocietyChild LaborSocial PolicyHuman RightsLatin American StudiesInternational LawHuman Rights LawHousehold LaborChildren's RightPublic International LawSociologyInternational OrganizationLabor LawPolitical ScienceHuman Rights NormsInter-american RelationSocial Justice
This article explores the reception of human rights norms on child labor in Bolivia and Argentina, countries where governments and civil societies express support for human rights. However, national responses after ratification of International Labor Organization's conventions diverge significantly. In Bolivia, domestic interpretations of human rights have prevailed over attachment to ILO conventions ("deviant compliance"), while in Argentina national policies exceed ILO recommendations ("over-compliance"). We use the evidence presented here to call for a more nuanced understanding of what compliance with human rights principles is understood to mean and to stress the importance of domestic interpretations of international norms.
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