Replication data supports a study on human rights shaming and racism. The underlying research employed two US survey experiments involving 6,739 respondents and eleven prominent Human Rights Organization interviews. The dataset was authored by Zoltan Buzas and is hosted by the American Journal of Political Science Dataverse.
Use Cases
- Replicate experimental findings on public support for shamed countries based on survey data
- Analyze the relationship between shaming interventions and perceptions of racism based on described variables
- Study the effectiveness of anti-racist cues in human rights messaging based on the described experimental design
- Investigate government countershaming strategies and public opinion recovery based on the study's findings
Strengths
- Dataset underpins a study with a substantial sample size of 6,739 survey respondents
- Research design includes two survey experiments and eleven expert interviews, suggesting methodological triangulation
Limitations
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment
Provenance
- Source
- American Journal of Political Science (AJPS) Dataverse
- Collection Method
- Data likely collected via two US survey experiments and eleven Human Rights Organization interviews.
- Freshness
- Last updated 2026-06-09 15:00:23; freshness should be verified
- Geography
- Survey experiments were conducted in the United States.