TY - JOUR
T1 - Transnational Backlash and the Deinstitutionalization of Liberal Norms
T2 - LGBT1 Rights in a Contested World1
AU - Velasco, Kristopher
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Integration into the international community is typically used to explain liberal outcomes. However, is it possible that such integration can also explain rising illiberalism? Using the case of LGBT1 rights, I argue that backlash to liberal norms is increasingly organized transnationally and that exposure to global norms via integration explains both liberal and illiberal outcomes. I test this argument through extensive original data collection and by using time-series cross-section, multinomial, and cross-lagged panel models. Robust findings reveal how exposure to global norms spurs policy backlashes-not just expansions- depending on how countries are situated within pro- and anti-LGBT1 transnational networks. This study contributes to our understanding of the changing international system by revealing how illiberal actors use mechanisms built by the liberal international community to transnationally organize and advance illiberal norms- ultimately fueling the deinstitutionalization of once-dominant liberal models.
AB - Integration into the international community is typically used to explain liberal outcomes. However, is it possible that such integration can also explain rising illiberalism? Using the case of LGBT1 rights, I argue that backlash to liberal norms is increasingly organized transnationally and that exposure to global norms via integration explains both liberal and illiberal outcomes. I test this argument through extensive original data collection and by using time-series cross-section, multinomial, and cross-lagged panel models. Robust findings reveal how exposure to global norms spurs policy backlashes-not just expansions- depending on how countries are situated within pro- and anti-LGBT1 transnational networks. This study contributes to our understanding of the changing international system by revealing how illiberal actors use mechanisms built by the liberal international community to transnationally organize and advance illiberal norms- ultimately fueling the deinstitutionalization of once-dominant liberal models.
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U2 - 10.1086/724724
DO - 10.1086/724724
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85162757928
SN - 0002-9602
VL - 128
SP - 1381
EP - 1429
JO - American Journal of Sociology
JF - American Journal of Sociology
IS - 5
ER -