Rhetoric of civil conflict management: United Nations Security Council debates over the Syrian civil war

Juraj Medzihorsky*, Milos Popovic, Erin K. Jenne

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract (may include machine translation)

This paper introduces a spatial model of civil conflict management rhetoric to explore how the emerging norm of responsibility to protect shapes major power rhetorical responses to civil war. Using framing theory, we argue that responsibility to protect functions like a prescriptive norm, such that representing a conflict as one of (1) human rights violations (problem definition), implies rhetorical support for (2) coercive outside intervention (solution identification). These dimensions reflect the problem-solution form of a prescriptive norm. Using dictionary scaling with a dynamic model, we analyze the positions of UN Security Council members in debates over the Syrian Civil War separately for each dimension. We find that the permanent members who emphasized human rights violations also used intervention rhetoric (UK, France, and the US), and those who did not used non-intervention rhetoric (Russia and China). We conclude that, while not a fully consolidated norm, responsibility to protect appears to have structured major power rhetorical responses to the Syrian Civil War.

Original languageEnglish
JournalResearch and Politics
Volume4
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2017

Keywords

  • Conflict management
  • Framing
  • Responsibility to protect
  • Syrian civil war
  • Text scaling
  • UN Security council

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