
Many transnational campaigns, and particularly the transnational campaign on violence against women, promote international norms that target the behavior of local nonstate actors. But these international norms are often at odds with local practices. What happens when the international and local norms collide? When does transnational activism lead individuals and communities to abandon local norms and embrace international ones?In When Norms Collide, Karisa Cloward presents a path-breaking theoretical framework for understanding the processes by which individuals negotiate competing demands placed on them by international and local norms. Drawing on extensive fieldwork with local communities in Kenya, she applies the theory to the practices of female genital mutilation and early marriage. Cloward argues that, when faced with international normative messages, individuals can decide to change their attitudes, their behavior, and the public image they present to international and local audiences. Moreover, the impact of transnational activism on individuals substantially depends on the salience of the international and local norms to their respective proponents, as well as on community-level factors.
This book investigates the mechanisms by which individuals navigate the conflict between international human rights norms and entrenched local cultural practices. Karisa Cloward, a political scientist, utilizes a theoretical framework grounded in social psychology and international relations to analyze how transnational activism influences community behavior. By examining the specific practices of female genital mutilation and early marriage, the author argues that normative change is not a binary outcome but a complex negotiation of public image, social pressure, and personal belief systems.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of international relations and development studies recognize this work as a rigorous examination of the limitations of top-down normative advocacy. Experts frequently note that the text provides a nuanced, evidence-based perspective on the complexities of social change in local contexts.
Page Count:
332
Publication Date:
2016-03-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190274913
ISBN-13:
9780190274917
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