Publications
Please email me for PDFs. Many of the articles' replication files are listed below; some are also available on the journal website where the article is published. Please email me for any replication files not listed yet.
Just a note: sometimes the links to articles change. It's hard to keep up! Please use Google Scholar or another search engine to find current working copies of all published work.
Book
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. Help or Harm: The Human Security Effects of International NGOs. Stanford University Press.
Articles
Avdan, Nazli, Amanda Murdie, and Victor Asal. Accepted. “A Ticking Time Bomb: Restrictions on Abortion Rights and Physical Integrity Rights Abuses.” American Political Science Review.
Brathwaite, Robert, Shanshan Lian, Amanda Murdie, and Baekkwan Park. Conditional Acceptance. “Tailoring the Message: A New Dataset on the Dyadic Nature of NGO Shaming in the Media.” Journal of Peace Research.
Adhikari, Bimal, Jeffrey King, and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Examining the Effects of Democratic Backsliding on Human Rights Conditions.” Journal of Human Rights.
Kiyani, Ghashia, Ryan Yu-Lin Liou, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. Forthcoming. “Economic Sanctions and Civil-Military Relations in Target Countries.” Armed Forces and Society.
Krain, Matthew, Amanda Murdie, and Abigail Beard. 2024. “Silencing Human Rights Defenders Once and for All? Determinants of Human Rights Defenders' Killings” Political Research Quarterly. 77(1): 401-416.
Wang, Zhen, Huimin Cheng, Ping Ma, Wenxuan Zhong, and Amanda Murdie. 2024. “Shifting Sands: How Change-Point and Community Detection Can Enrich our Understanding of International Politics” International Interactions. 50(2): 349-369.
Crabtree, Charles, Jeong-Woo Koo, Amanda Murdie, and Kiyo Tsutsui. 2023. “Why the Public Supports the Human Rights of Prisoners and Asylum Seekers: An Experimental Approach. Political Research Quarterly. 76(3): 1445-1459.
Lian, Shanshan and Amanda Murdie. 2023 “How Closing Civil Society Space Affects NGO-Government Interactions.” Journal of Human Rights. 22(4): 431-450.*Winner of the 2021 Frank J. Klingberg Award for Best Paper Presented by a Faculty Member at the 2020 International Studies Association Midwest Conference.
Avdan, Nazli, Bryan Early, Ryan Liou, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2023. “The Blame Game: Public Outcry and Terrorism Within and Exported from the Sanctioned State. Foreign Policy Analysis. 19(1):
orac029.
Barney, Morgan and Amanda Murdie. 2023. "Localizing the NGO Delivery of Health from the Outside In." Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In Special Issue "SPRING 2023 Delivering
Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflcts," Guest Editors: Jaime Sepúlveda, Jennifer M. Welsh &Paul H. Wise.
Liou, Ryan, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2023. “Pressures from Home and Abroad: Economic Sanctions and Target Government Response to Domestic Campaigns.” Journal of Conflict Resolution. 67(2-3): 297-325.
Koo, Jeong-Woo and Murdie, Amanda.2022. “Do NGO Restrictions Limit Terrorism? Smear Campaigns or Counterterrorism Tools.” Journal of Global Security Studies. 7(1): ogab035.
Barney, Morgan, Amanda Murdie, Baekkwan Park, Jacqueline Hart, and Margo Mullinax. 2022. “From Age to Agency: Frame Adoption and Diffusion Concerning the International Human Rights Norm Against Child, Early, and Forced Marriage.” Human Rights Review. 23: 503-528.
Murdie, Amanda. 2022. “Hindsight is 2020: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic for Future Human Rights Research.” Journal of Human Rights. 21(3): 354-364.
Anaya-Muñoz, Alejandro and Amanda Murdie. 2022 “The Will and the Way: How State Capacity and Willingness Jointly Affect Human Rights Improvement.” Human Rights Review. 23(1): 127-154.
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, Ghashia Kiyani, and Amanda Murdie. 2022. “Civil-Military Relations and Human Rights.” Armed Forces and Society.48(3): 701-722.
Bsisu, Naji, and Amanda Murdie. 2022. “Interventions and Repression Following Civil Conflict” Journal of Peace Research. Journal of Peace Research. 59(2): 213-228.
Cheng, Huimin, Ye Wang, Ping Ma, and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “Communities and Brokers: How the Transnational Advocacy Network Simultaneously Provides Social Power and Exacerbates Global Inequalities.” International Studies Quarterly. 65(3): 724-738.
Avdan, Nazli, Naji Bsisu, and Amanda Murdie. 2021. "Abuse by Association: Migration from Terror-Prone Countries and Human Rights Abuses." International Interactions. 47(2): 237-265.
Pacheco-Vega, Raul and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “When Do Environmental NGOs Work? A Test of the Conditional Effectiveness of Environmental Advocacy.” Environmental Politics. 30(1-2): 180-201.
Liou, Ryan, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2021. “Revisiting the Causal Links Between Economic Sanctions and Human Rights Violations.” Political Research Quarterly. 74(4): 808–821.
Park, Baekkwan, Amanda Murdie, and David R. Davis. 2021. “Turning up the Volume: The Amplification of Shame.” Human Rights Quarterly. 43(1): 170-198.
Kiyani, Ghashia and Amanda Murdie. 2020. “Unintended Restrictions: Women's Rights INGOs and Women's Civil Society Restrictions.” Human Rights Review. 21(4): 349-372.
Haines, Allie, Matthew Krain, Michele Leiby, and Amanda Murdie. 2020. "Two Sides of the Same Coin: Can Campaigns Generate Support for Both Human Rights and Retributive Violence?” International Interactions. 46(3):402-430.
Lee, Myunghee and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “The Global Diffusion of the #MeToo Movement.” Politics and Gender. 17(4): 827-855.
Clay, K. Chad, Ryan Bakker, Anne-Marie Brook, Daniel W. Hill, Jr., and Amanda Murdie. 202. “Using Practitioner Surveys to Measure Human Rights” Journal of Peace Research. 57(6): 715-727
Bracic, Ana and Amanda Murdie. 2020. "Human Rights Abused? Terrorist Labeling and Individual Reactions to Call to Action." Political Research Quarterly. 73(4): 878-892.
Allendoerfer, Michelle, Amanda Murdie, and Ryan Welch. 2020. “The Path of the Boomerang: Human Rights Campaigns, Third-Party Pressure, and Human Rights” International Studies Quarterly. 64(1): 111-119.
Park, Baekkwan, Amanda Murdie, and David R. Davis. 2020. “Advocacy Output: Automated-Coding Documents from Human Rights Organizations” Journal of Human Rights. 19(1): 83-98.
Campbell, Susanna, Matthew DiGiuseppe, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “International Development NGOs and Bureaucratic Capacity: Facilitator or Destroyer.” Political Research Quarterly. 72(1): 3-18.
Bell, Sam, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksun. 2019. “The Impact of Globalization on Women’s and Non-Women’s Protest.” Social Science Quarterly. 100(3): 604-619.
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. "Join the Chorus, Avoid the Spotlight: The Effect of Neighborhood & Social Dynamics on Human Rights Organization Shaming." Journal of Conflict Resolution.63(1): 167-193.
Bell, Sam, Patricia Blocksome, Kevin Brown, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “Help or Hindrance? The Role of Humanitarian Military Interventions in Human Security NGO Operations.” International Political Science Review. 40(2): 263-278.
Burns, Courtney and Amanda Murdie. 2018. "Female Chief Executives and State Human Rights Practices: Self-Fulfilling the Political Double Bind." Journal of Human Rights. 17(4): 470-484.
Campbell, Blake and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Keep the Informants Talking: The Pursuit & Use of CBRN Weapons by Terrorist Organizations.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism. Pages: TBD.
Murdie, Amanda. 2018. “We Need a New International Norm: Eradicating the Gender Citation Gap.” Political Analysis. 26(3): 345-347.
Peterson, Timothy M., Amanda Murdie, and Victor Asal. 2018. "Human Rights NGO Shaming and the Exports of Abusive States." British Journal of Political Science. 48(3): 767-786. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Bell, Sam and Amanda Murdie. 2018. "The Apparatus for Violence: Repression, Violent Protest, and Civil War in a Cross-National Framework." Conflict Management and Peace Science. 35(4): 336-354. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda, Andrew P Owsiak, Naji Bsisu, Sam R Bell, K Chad Clay, Nicole Detraz, Dursun Peksen and Timothy M Peterson. 2018. “The Necessity of Research-Informed International Relations: Announcing a New Editorial Team for International Studies Review” International Studies Review. 20(1): 1-2.
Asal, Victor, Matthew Krain, Amanda Murdie, and Brandon Kennedy. 2018. “Killing the Messenger: Regime Type as a Determinant of Journalist Killing, 1992-2008.” Foreign Policy Analysis. 14 (1): 24-43.. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Carolin Purser. 2017. “How Protest Affects Opinions of Peaceful Demonstration and Expression Rights.” Journal of Human Rights. 16(3): 351-369 *Replication Data on Journal Website
Guarrieri, Thomas, A. Cooper Drury, and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “Introduction: Exploring Peace.” International Studies Review. 19(1): 1-5.
Murdie, Amanda. 2017. “R2P, Human Rights, and the Perils of a Bad Human Rights Intervention.” Global Responsibility to Protect. Special Issue on R2P and Human Rights. Special Issue on R2P and Human Rights. 9(3): 267-293.
Woo, Byungwon and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “International Organizations and Naming and Shaming: Does the International Monetary Fund Care about the Human Rights Reputation of its Client?” Political Studies. 65(4): 767-785.
Dietrich, Simone and Amanda Murdie. 2017. "Human Rights Shaming Through INGOs and Foreign Aid Delivery. " Review of International Organizations. 12(1): 95-120. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Asal, Victor, Chris Bronk, Ken Cousins, Jacob Mauslein, Amanda Murdie, and Joe Young. 2016. "Repression, Education and Politically Motivated Denial of Service Attacks." Journal of Global Security Studies. 1(3): 235–247. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Asal, Victor, Deloughery, Kathleen, and Amanda Murdie. 2016 “Responding to Terrorism? Human Rights Organization Shaming and Terrorist Attacks.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism. 39(3): 240-259.
Wilson, Maya, David R. Davis and Amanda Murdie. 2016. “The View from the Bottom: Networks of Conflict Resolution Organizations and International Peace” Journal of Peace Research. 53(3): 442-458. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2015. “Women and Contentious Politics: A Global Event-Data Approach to Understanding Women’s Protest.” Political Research Quarterly. 68(1): 180-192. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2015. “Women's Rights INGO Shaming and the Government Respect for Women's Rights.” Review of International Organizations. 10(1): 1-22. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Stephen Quackenbush. 2015. “We Always Fight the Last War? The Effect of Prior Experiences in Counterinsurgency and Conventional Warfare on War Outcomes.” International Interactions. 41(1): 2015. *Replication Data on II's Website
Barry, Colin, Sam Bell, K. Chad Clay, Michael Flynn, and Amanda Murdie. 2015 “Choose the Best House in the Bad Neighborhood: Location Strategies of Human Rights INGOs in the Non-Western World." International Studies Quarterly. 59(1): 86-98. *Replication Data on ISQ's website
Murdie, Amanda and Sean Webeck. 2015. “Responding the the Call: Human Security INGOs and Countries with a History of Civil War.” International Political Science Review. 36(1): 3-19. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Johannes Urpelainen. 2015. “Why Pick on Us? Environmental INGOs and State Shaming as a Strategic Substitute.” Political Studies. 63(2): 353-372. Replication Data
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, Amanda Murdie, and James Piazza. 2014. “Opening Yourself Up: The Role of External and Internal Transparency in Terrorism Attacks.” Political Research Quarterly. 67(3): 603-614.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. "Scrambling for Contract: The Determinants of Inter-INGO Cooperation in Non-Western Countries," Review of International Organizations. 9(3): 309-331. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2014. “The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Humanitarian Interventions.” Journal of Politics. 76(1): 215 - 228. Winner of the 2013 Frank J. Klingberg Award for Best Paper Presented by a Faculty Member at the 2012 ISA Midwest Conference. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Craig Stapley. 2014. "Why Target the 'Good Guys'? The Determinants of Terrorism Against NGOs." International Interactions. 40(1): 79-102. *Replication Files are on the II website.
Bell, Sam, K.Chad Clay, Tavishi Bhasin, and Amanda Murdie. 2014. “Taking the Fight to Them: Neighborhood Human Rights Organizations and Domestic Protest.” British Journal of Political Science. 44(4): 853-875.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. “The Ties that Bind: A Network Analysis of Human Rights INGOs.” British Journal of Political Science. 44(1): 1-27.
*Replication Materials are on BJPS website. Zip File
Bell, Sam, Murdie, Amanda, Patricia Blocksome, and Kevin Brown. 2013. “Force Multipliers: Conditional Effectiveness of Military and INGO Human Security Interventions.” Journal of Human Rights. 12(4): 397-422. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Alexander Hicks. 2013. “Can International NGOs Boost Government Services: The Case of Health.” International Organization. 67(3): 541-574. *Replication Materials are on IO website.
Bell, Sam, David R. Cingranelli, Amanda Murdie, and Alper Caglayan. 2013. “Coercion, Capacity, and Coordination: Predictors of Political Violence.” Conflict Management and Peace Science. 30(3): 240-262. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2013. “The Bad, the Good, and the Ugly: The Impact of Civil-Military Relations on International Crisis Outcome." Armed Forces and Society.39(2): 233-254. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2013. “The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Sanctions.” The Review of International Organizations. 8(1): 33-53. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Stroup, Sarah and Amanda Murdie. 2012. “There's No Place Like Home: Explaining International NGO Advocacy” The Review of International Organizations. 7(4): 425-448. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2012. “Looking in the Mirror: Comparing INGO Networks Across Issue Areas.” The Review of International Organizations. 7(2): 177-202. Replication Data
Bell, Sam K. Chad Clay, and Amanda Murdie. 2012. "Neighborhood Watch: Spatial Effects of Human Rights INGOs” Journal of Politics.74(2): 1-16. Replication Materials
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2012. "Shaming and Blaming: Using Events Data to Assess the Impact of Human Rights INGOs” International Studies Quarterly.56(1): 1-16. Replication Data
Davis, David R., Murdie, Amanda, and Coty Garnett. 2012. “Makers and Shapers: Human Rights INGOs and Public Opinion” Human Rights Quarterly. 34(1): 199-224. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2011. “Putting Conflict Where It Belongs: A Response to “Changing Patterns of Russian and American Civil-Military Relations” (Senior-Junior Exchange). Public Administration Review. 71(4): 530-534.
Murdie, Amanda and Tavishi Bhasin. 2011. “Aiding and Abetting? Human Rights INGOs and Domestic Anti- Government Protest” Journal of Conflict Resolution. 55(2): 163-191.Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2010. “Problematic Potential: The Human Rights Consequences of Peacekeeping Interventions in Civil Wars” Human Rights Quarterly. 32 (1): 50-73. Replication Data
Other Publications
Carmichael, Leah and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Social Media and the International Studies Classroom.” In The Oxford Handbook of International Studies Pedagogy ISBN: 9780197544891.
Watson, K. Annie and Amanda Murdie. 2021. "Quantitative Human Rights.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies.
Murdie, Amanda. 2020. “Rights and Wrongs: Human Rights at the Intersection of the IR Academy and Practice” in The Theory–Practice Divide in International Relations, edited by Daniel Maliniak, Susan Peterson, Ryan Powers, and Michael J. Tierney. Georgetown University Press.
Bsisu, Naji. and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “Networks of Peace.” In Oxford Handbook of Peacebuilding, Statebuilding, and Peace Formation, edited by Oliver P. Richmond and Gezim Visoka.
Murdie, Amanda, Baekkwan Park, Jacqueline Hart, and Margo Mullinax. 2019. “Building Momentum: Changes in Advocacy Discourse Around Early Child Marriage, 2011-2017” In Contesting Human Rights: Norms, Institutions and Practice, edited by Alison Brysk and Michael S. Stohl. Elgar Studies in Human Rights.
Polizzi, Marc and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “NGOs and Human Rights. In the Routledge Handbook of NGOs and International Relations, edited by Thomas Davies.
Murdie, Amanda and Marc S. Polizzi. 2017. “Human Rights and Transnational Advocacy Networks.” In the Oxford Handbook of Political Networks.
Hunter, Sarah and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “International Non-governmental Organizations and Foreign Policy Analysis.” In the Encyclopedia of Foreign Policy Analysis.
Anderson, Jessica and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “What Helps Protect Human Rights: Human Rights Theory and Evidence.” In the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics.
Murdie, Amanda. 2016. Critical Dialogue. Review of Carew Boulding, “NGOs, Political Protest, and Civil Society.” Perspectives on Politics. 14(1): 181-182.
Murdie, Amanda. 2016. Critical Dialogue. Response to Carew Boulding's Review of Help or Harm: The Human Security Effects of International NGOs. Perspectives on Politics. 14(1): 180-181.
Murdie, Amanda and Ranya Ahmed Forthcoming. “International Nongovernmental Organizations and Human Rights Promotion." Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014 “Progress by Peacekeeping? Civil-Military Relations and Involvement in UN Peacekeeping.” International Studies Review. 16(4): 681-683.
Murdie, Amanda. 2013. Review of Andrew Yeo, “Activists, Alliances, and Anti-U.S. Base Protests.” Perspective of Politics. 11(4): 1230 - 1231.
Murdie, Amanda and Jakub Kakietek. 2012. “Do NGOs Really Work? The Impact of International Development NGOs on Economic Growth” Journal of Sustainable Society. 1(1): 1-10. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2012. “The Conditional Impact of Human Rights INGOs on Democracy Promotion” in Liberal Interventionism and Democracy Promotion, edited by Dursun Peksen. Lexington Books. 141-164.
Murdie, Amanda. 2012. Review of Aseem Prakash and Mary Kay Gugerty, “Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action.” Journal of Politics. 74(1):1-3.
Murdie, Amanda. 2009. “The Impact of Human Rights INGOs on Human Rights Practices” International NGO Journal. 4 (10): 421-440.
Just a note: sometimes the links to articles change. It's hard to keep up! Please use Google Scholar or another search engine to find current working copies of all published work.
Book
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. Help or Harm: The Human Security Effects of International NGOs. Stanford University Press.
Articles
Avdan, Nazli, Amanda Murdie, and Victor Asal. Accepted. “A Ticking Time Bomb: Restrictions on Abortion Rights and Physical Integrity Rights Abuses.” American Political Science Review.
Brathwaite, Robert, Shanshan Lian, Amanda Murdie, and Baekkwan Park. Conditional Acceptance. “Tailoring the Message: A New Dataset on the Dyadic Nature of NGO Shaming in the Media.” Journal of Peace Research.
Adhikari, Bimal, Jeffrey King, and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Examining the Effects of Democratic Backsliding on Human Rights Conditions.” Journal of Human Rights.
Kiyani, Ghashia, Ryan Yu-Lin Liou, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. Forthcoming. “Economic Sanctions and Civil-Military Relations in Target Countries.” Armed Forces and Society.
Krain, Matthew, Amanda Murdie, and Abigail Beard. 2024. “Silencing Human Rights Defenders Once and for All? Determinants of Human Rights Defenders' Killings” Political Research Quarterly. 77(1): 401-416.
Wang, Zhen, Huimin Cheng, Ping Ma, Wenxuan Zhong, and Amanda Murdie. 2024. “Shifting Sands: How Change-Point and Community Detection Can Enrich our Understanding of International Politics” International Interactions. 50(2): 349-369.
Crabtree, Charles, Jeong-Woo Koo, Amanda Murdie, and Kiyo Tsutsui. 2023. “Why the Public Supports the Human Rights of Prisoners and Asylum Seekers: An Experimental Approach. Political Research Quarterly. 76(3): 1445-1459.
Lian, Shanshan and Amanda Murdie. 2023 “How Closing Civil Society Space Affects NGO-Government Interactions.” Journal of Human Rights. 22(4): 431-450.*Winner of the 2021 Frank J. Klingberg Award for Best Paper Presented by a Faculty Member at the 2020 International Studies Association Midwest Conference.
Avdan, Nazli, Bryan Early, Ryan Liou, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2023. “The Blame Game: Public Outcry and Terrorism Within and Exported from the Sanctioned State. Foreign Policy Analysis. 19(1):
orac029.
Barney, Morgan and Amanda Murdie. 2023. "Localizing the NGO Delivery of Health from the Outside In." Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In Special Issue "SPRING 2023 Delivering
Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflcts," Guest Editors: Jaime Sepúlveda, Jennifer M. Welsh &Paul H. Wise.
Liou, Ryan, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2023. “Pressures from Home and Abroad: Economic Sanctions and Target Government Response to Domestic Campaigns.” Journal of Conflict Resolution. 67(2-3): 297-325.
Koo, Jeong-Woo and Murdie, Amanda.2022. “Do NGO Restrictions Limit Terrorism? Smear Campaigns or Counterterrorism Tools.” Journal of Global Security Studies. 7(1): ogab035.
Barney, Morgan, Amanda Murdie, Baekkwan Park, Jacqueline Hart, and Margo Mullinax. 2022. “From Age to Agency: Frame Adoption and Diffusion Concerning the International Human Rights Norm Against Child, Early, and Forced Marriage.” Human Rights Review. 23: 503-528.
Murdie, Amanda. 2022. “Hindsight is 2020: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic for Future Human Rights Research.” Journal of Human Rights. 21(3): 354-364.
Anaya-Muñoz, Alejandro and Amanda Murdie. 2022 “The Will and the Way: How State Capacity and Willingness Jointly Affect Human Rights Improvement.” Human Rights Review. 23(1): 127-154.
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, Ghashia Kiyani, and Amanda Murdie. 2022. “Civil-Military Relations and Human Rights.” Armed Forces and Society.48(3): 701-722.
Bsisu, Naji, and Amanda Murdie. 2022. “Interventions and Repression Following Civil Conflict” Journal of Peace Research. Journal of Peace Research. 59(2): 213-228.
Cheng, Huimin, Ye Wang, Ping Ma, and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “Communities and Brokers: How the Transnational Advocacy Network Simultaneously Provides Social Power and Exacerbates Global Inequalities.” International Studies Quarterly. 65(3): 724-738.
Avdan, Nazli, Naji Bsisu, and Amanda Murdie. 2021. "Abuse by Association: Migration from Terror-Prone Countries and Human Rights Abuses." International Interactions. 47(2): 237-265.
Pacheco-Vega, Raul and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “When Do Environmental NGOs Work? A Test of the Conditional Effectiveness of Environmental Advocacy.” Environmental Politics. 30(1-2): 180-201.
Liou, Ryan, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksen. 2021. “Revisiting the Causal Links Between Economic Sanctions and Human Rights Violations.” Political Research Quarterly. 74(4): 808–821.
Park, Baekkwan, Amanda Murdie, and David R. Davis. 2021. “Turning up the Volume: The Amplification of Shame.” Human Rights Quarterly. 43(1): 170-198.
Kiyani, Ghashia and Amanda Murdie. 2020. “Unintended Restrictions: Women's Rights INGOs and Women's Civil Society Restrictions.” Human Rights Review. 21(4): 349-372.
Haines, Allie, Matthew Krain, Michele Leiby, and Amanda Murdie. 2020. "Two Sides of the Same Coin: Can Campaigns Generate Support for Both Human Rights and Retributive Violence?” International Interactions. 46(3):402-430.
Lee, Myunghee and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “The Global Diffusion of the #MeToo Movement.” Politics and Gender. 17(4): 827-855.
Clay, K. Chad, Ryan Bakker, Anne-Marie Brook, Daniel W. Hill, Jr., and Amanda Murdie. 202. “Using Practitioner Surveys to Measure Human Rights” Journal of Peace Research. 57(6): 715-727
Bracic, Ana and Amanda Murdie. 2020. "Human Rights Abused? Terrorist Labeling and Individual Reactions to Call to Action." Political Research Quarterly. 73(4): 878-892.
Allendoerfer, Michelle, Amanda Murdie, and Ryan Welch. 2020. “The Path of the Boomerang: Human Rights Campaigns, Third-Party Pressure, and Human Rights” International Studies Quarterly. 64(1): 111-119.
Park, Baekkwan, Amanda Murdie, and David R. Davis. 2020. “Advocacy Output: Automated-Coding Documents from Human Rights Organizations” Journal of Human Rights. 19(1): 83-98.
Campbell, Susanna, Matthew DiGiuseppe, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “International Development NGOs and Bureaucratic Capacity: Facilitator or Destroyer.” Political Research Quarterly. 72(1): 3-18.
Bell, Sam, Amanda Murdie, and Dursun Peksun. 2019. “The Impact of Globalization on Women’s and Non-Women’s Protest.” Social Science Quarterly. 100(3): 604-619.
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. "Join the Chorus, Avoid the Spotlight: The Effect of Neighborhood & Social Dynamics on Human Rights Organization Shaming." Journal of Conflict Resolution.63(1): 167-193.
Bell, Sam, Patricia Blocksome, Kevin Brown, and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “Help or Hindrance? The Role of Humanitarian Military Interventions in Human Security NGO Operations.” International Political Science Review. 40(2): 263-278.
Burns, Courtney and Amanda Murdie. 2018. "Female Chief Executives and State Human Rights Practices: Self-Fulfilling the Political Double Bind." Journal of Human Rights. 17(4): 470-484.
Campbell, Blake and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Keep the Informants Talking: The Pursuit & Use of CBRN Weapons by Terrorist Organizations.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism. Pages: TBD.
Murdie, Amanda. 2018. “We Need a New International Norm: Eradicating the Gender Citation Gap.” Political Analysis. 26(3): 345-347.
Peterson, Timothy M., Amanda Murdie, and Victor Asal. 2018. "Human Rights NGO Shaming and the Exports of Abusive States." British Journal of Political Science. 48(3): 767-786. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Bell, Sam and Amanda Murdie. 2018. "The Apparatus for Violence: Repression, Violent Protest, and Civil War in a Cross-National Framework." Conflict Management and Peace Science. 35(4): 336-354. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda, Andrew P Owsiak, Naji Bsisu, Sam R Bell, K Chad Clay, Nicole Detraz, Dursun Peksen and Timothy M Peterson. 2018. “The Necessity of Research-Informed International Relations: Announcing a New Editorial Team for International Studies Review” International Studies Review. 20(1): 1-2.
Asal, Victor, Matthew Krain, Amanda Murdie, and Brandon Kennedy. 2018. “Killing the Messenger: Regime Type as a Determinant of Journalist Killing, 1992-2008.” Foreign Policy Analysis. 14 (1): 24-43.. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Carolin Purser. 2017. “How Protest Affects Opinions of Peaceful Demonstration and Expression Rights.” Journal of Human Rights. 16(3): 351-369 *Replication Data on Journal Website
Guarrieri, Thomas, A. Cooper Drury, and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “Introduction: Exploring Peace.” International Studies Review. 19(1): 1-5.
Murdie, Amanda. 2017. “R2P, Human Rights, and the Perils of a Bad Human Rights Intervention.” Global Responsibility to Protect. Special Issue on R2P and Human Rights. Special Issue on R2P and Human Rights. 9(3): 267-293.
Woo, Byungwon and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “International Organizations and Naming and Shaming: Does the International Monetary Fund Care about the Human Rights Reputation of its Client?” Political Studies. 65(4): 767-785.
Dietrich, Simone and Amanda Murdie. 2017. "Human Rights Shaming Through INGOs and Foreign Aid Delivery. " Review of International Organizations. 12(1): 95-120. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Asal, Victor, Chris Bronk, Ken Cousins, Jacob Mauslein, Amanda Murdie, and Joe Young. 2016. "Repression, Education and Politically Motivated Denial of Service Attacks." Journal of Global Security Studies. 1(3): 235–247. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Asal, Victor, Deloughery, Kathleen, and Amanda Murdie. 2016 “Responding to Terrorism? Human Rights Organization Shaming and Terrorist Attacks.” Studies in Conflict and Terrorism. 39(3): 240-259.
Wilson, Maya, David R. Davis and Amanda Murdie. 2016. “The View from the Bottom: Networks of Conflict Resolution Organizations and International Peace” Journal of Peace Research. 53(3): 442-458. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2015. “Women and Contentious Politics: A Global Event-Data Approach to Understanding Women’s Protest.” Political Research Quarterly. 68(1): 180-192. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2015. “Women's Rights INGO Shaming and the Government Respect for Women's Rights.” Review of International Organizations. 10(1): 1-22. *Replication Data on Journal Website
Murdie, Amanda and Stephen Quackenbush. 2015. “We Always Fight the Last War? The Effect of Prior Experiences in Counterinsurgency and Conventional Warfare on War Outcomes.” International Interactions. 41(1): 2015. *Replication Data on II's Website
Barry, Colin, Sam Bell, K. Chad Clay, Michael Flynn, and Amanda Murdie. 2015 “Choose the Best House in the Bad Neighborhood: Location Strategies of Human Rights INGOs in the Non-Western World." International Studies Quarterly. 59(1): 86-98. *Replication Data on ISQ's website
Murdie, Amanda and Sean Webeck. 2015. “Responding the the Call: Human Security INGOs and Countries with a History of Civil War.” International Political Science Review. 36(1): 3-19. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Johannes Urpelainen. 2015. “Why Pick on Us? Environmental INGOs and State Shaming as a Strategic Substitute.” Political Studies. 63(2): 353-372. Replication Data
Bell, Sam, K. Chad Clay, Amanda Murdie, and James Piazza. 2014. “Opening Yourself Up: The Role of External and Internal Transparency in Terrorism Attacks.” Political Research Quarterly. 67(3): 603-614.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. "Scrambling for Contract: The Determinants of Inter-INGO Cooperation in Non-Western Countries," Review of International Organizations. 9(3): 309-331. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2014. “The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Humanitarian Interventions.” Journal of Politics. 76(1): 215 - 228. Winner of the 2013 Frank J. Klingberg Award for Best Paper Presented by a Faculty Member at the 2012 ISA Midwest Conference. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Craig Stapley. 2014. "Why Target the 'Good Guys'? The Determinants of Terrorism Against NGOs." International Interactions. 40(1): 79-102. *Replication Files are on the II website.
Bell, Sam, K.Chad Clay, Tavishi Bhasin, and Amanda Murdie. 2014. “Taking the Fight to Them: Neighborhood Human Rights Organizations and Domestic Protest.” British Journal of Political Science. 44(4): 853-875.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014. “The Ties that Bind: A Network Analysis of Human Rights INGOs.” British Journal of Political Science. 44(1): 1-27.
*Replication Materials are on BJPS website. Zip File
Bell, Sam, Murdie, Amanda, Patricia Blocksome, and Kevin Brown. 2013. “Force Multipliers: Conditional Effectiveness of Military and INGO Human Security Interventions.” Journal of Human Rights. 12(4): 397-422. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Alexander Hicks. 2013. “Can International NGOs Boost Government Services: The Case of Health.” International Organization. 67(3): 541-574. *Replication Materials are on IO website.
Bell, Sam, David R. Cingranelli, Amanda Murdie, and Alper Caglayan. 2013. “Coercion, Capacity, and Coordination: Predictors of Political Violence.” Conflict Management and Peace Science. 30(3): 240-262. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2013. “The Bad, the Good, and the Ugly: The Impact of Civil-Military Relations on International Crisis Outcome." Armed Forces and Society.39(2): 233-254. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and Dursun Peksen. 2013. “The Impact of Human Rights INGO Shaming on Sanctions.” The Review of International Organizations. 8(1): 33-53. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Stroup, Sarah and Amanda Murdie. 2012. “There's No Place Like Home: Explaining International NGO Advocacy” The Review of International Organizations. 7(4): 425-448. *Replication Materials are on RIO website.
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2012. “Looking in the Mirror: Comparing INGO Networks Across Issue Areas.” The Review of International Organizations. 7(2): 177-202. Replication Data
Bell, Sam K. Chad Clay, and Amanda Murdie. 2012. "Neighborhood Watch: Spatial Effects of Human Rights INGOs” Journal of Politics.74(2): 1-16. Replication Materials
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2012. "Shaming and Blaming: Using Events Data to Assess the Impact of Human Rights INGOs” International Studies Quarterly.56(1): 1-16. Replication Data
Davis, David R., Murdie, Amanda, and Coty Garnett. 2012. “Makers and Shapers: Human Rights INGOs and Public Opinion” Human Rights Quarterly. 34(1): 199-224. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2011. “Putting Conflict Where It Belongs: A Response to “Changing Patterns of Russian and American Civil-Military Relations” (Senior-Junior Exchange). Public Administration Review. 71(4): 530-534.
Murdie, Amanda and Tavishi Bhasin. 2011. “Aiding and Abetting? Human Rights INGOs and Domestic Anti- Government Protest” Journal of Conflict Resolution. 55(2): 163-191.Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda and David R. Davis. 2010. “Problematic Potential: The Human Rights Consequences of Peacekeeping Interventions in Civil Wars” Human Rights Quarterly. 32 (1): 50-73. Replication Data
Other Publications
Carmichael, Leah and Amanda Murdie. Forthcoming. “Social Media and the International Studies Classroom.” In The Oxford Handbook of International Studies Pedagogy ISBN: 9780197544891.
Watson, K. Annie and Amanda Murdie. 2021. "Quantitative Human Rights.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies.
Murdie, Amanda. 2020. “Rights and Wrongs: Human Rights at the Intersection of the IR Academy and Practice” in The Theory–Practice Divide in International Relations, edited by Daniel Maliniak, Susan Peterson, Ryan Powers, and Michael J. Tierney. Georgetown University Press.
Bsisu, Naji. and Amanda Murdie. 2021. “Networks of Peace.” In Oxford Handbook of Peacebuilding, Statebuilding, and Peace Formation, edited by Oliver P. Richmond and Gezim Visoka.
Murdie, Amanda, Baekkwan Park, Jacqueline Hart, and Margo Mullinax. 2019. “Building Momentum: Changes in Advocacy Discourse Around Early Child Marriage, 2011-2017” In Contesting Human Rights: Norms, Institutions and Practice, edited by Alison Brysk and Michael S. Stohl. Elgar Studies in Human Rights.
Polizzi, Marc and Amanda Murdie. 2019. “NGOs and Human Rights. In the Routledge Handbook of NGOs and International Relations, edited by Thomas Davies.
Murdie, Amanda and Marc S. Polizzi. 2017. “Human Rights and Transnational Advocacy Networks.” In the Oxford Handbook of Political Networks.
Hunter, Sarah and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “International Non-governmental Organizations and Foreign Policy Analysis.” In the Encyclopedia of Foreign Policy Analysis.
Anderson, Jessica and Amanda Murdie. 2017. “What Helps Protect Human Rights: Human Rights Theory and Evidence.” In the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics.
Murdie, Amanda. 2016. Critical Dialogue. Review of Carew Boulding, “NGOs, Political Protest, and Civil Society.” Perspectives on Politics. 14(1): 181-182.
Murdie, Amanda. 2016. Critical Dialogue. Response to Carew Boulding's Review of Help or Harm: The Human Security Effects of International NGOs. Perspectives on Politics. 14(1): 180-181.
Murdie, Amanda and Ranya Ahmed Forthcoming. “International Nongovernmental Organizations and Human Rights Promotion." Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy.
Murdie, Amanda. 2014 “Progress by Peacekeeping? Civil-Military Relations and Involvement in UN Peacekeeping.” International Studies Review. 16(4): 681-683.
Murdie, Amanda. 2013. Review of Andrew Yeo, “Activists, Alliances, and Anti-U.S. Base Protests.” Perspective of Politics. 11(4): 1230 - 1231.
Murdie, Amanda and Jakub Kakietek. 2012. “Do NGOs Really Work? The Impact of International Development NGOs on Economic Growth” Journal of Sustainable Society. 1(1): 1-10. Replication Data
Murdie, Amanda. 2012. “The Conditional Impact of Human Rights INGOs on Democracy Promotion” in Liberal Interventionism and Democracy Promotion, edited by Dursun Peksen. Lexington Books. 141-164.
Murdie, Amanda. 2012. Review of Aseem Prakash and Mary Kay Gugerty, “Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action.” Journal of Politics. 74(1):1-3.
Murdie, Amanda. 2009. “The Impact of Human Rights INGOs on Human Rights Practices” International NGO Journal. 4 (10): 421-440.