THE PROBLEM OF CAUSALITY IN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

Abstract The field of human rights monitoring has become preoccupied with statistical methods for measuring performance, such as benchmarks and indicators. This is reflected within human rights scholarship, which has become increasingly ‘empirical’ in its approach. However, the relevant actors developing statistical approaches typically treat causality somewhat blithely, and this causes critical problems for such projects. This article suggests that resources—whether temporal or fiscal—may be better allocated towards improving methods for identifying violations rather than developing complicated, but ultimately ineffective, statistical methods for monitoring human rights performance.


I. INTRODUCTION
In its 2008 report to the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), 1 the UK informed the Committee that, amongst many other things, it had a strategy to reduce inequalities in health outcomes by 10 per cent; 2 that 58.5 per cent of 15-year-old school pupils achieved five or more A*-C grade GCSEs or equivalent in the period 2005-06; 3 and that the number of households defined as eligible for assistance against homelessness had fallen by 43 per cent since 2006. 4 This is by no means unusual. The international human rights system, broadly construed, is increasingly interested in aggregate outcomes-a phenomenon which sees human rights monitoring as an exercise of measuring performance across populations through statistical techniques. Notwithstanding the recent development of an individual complaints procedure for the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), the international human rights system and its * School of Law, Northumbria University, david.mcgrogan@northumbria.ac.uk. The author wishes to thank Lee McConnell and Rhona Smith for helpful comments on an early draft of this article. 1 The UK's Fifth Periodic Report, CESCR, UN Doc E/C.12/GBR/5 (31 January 2008). The UK's most recent report, the Sixth, is available at UN Doc E/C.12/GBR/6 (25 September 2014). 2 ibid, paras 302-305. 'Inequalities in health outcomes' meant the difference in figures for infant mortality and life expectancy at birth between the fifth of areas with the worst health and deprivation indicators and the rest of the population. 3 ibid, para 334. The actual report states the period as '2006-2006' [sic]; it is assumed this is a typographical error for '2005-2006'. 4 ibid, para 286.
academic study now concerns itself in large part with how to monitor human rights performance across groups, populations, and societies. Whether a given individual's rights have been violated in a given circumstance is, in the context of the UN treaty system, a question that is becoming almost quaint; the focus is increasingly on how far in general human rights are being protected in a given State, as evidenced by measured outcomes. Critics of this phenomenon have raised concerns about the way in which human rights statistics are gathered and used, 5 about how statistical indicators can act to obscure truth or to mask political choices, 6 or even how the use of statistics in international governance ushers in a new era of audit and control. 7 The author shares these concerns, and adds a more foundational epistemic one: at the heart of this development towards outcomes measurement there is a conceptual blind spot. That conceptual blind spot is causality. What causes statistically measured human rights outcomes?
Identifying and attributing causality-the making of 'credible causal inferences' 8 -in human societies is fraught with difficulty. This has been known and understood since David Hume was writing, and is nowadays often tritely summarized with the maxim 'correlation is not causation'. This means that, for instance, establishing whether the UK government actually caused the reported fall in the number of households defined as eligible for assistance against homelessness of 43 per cent between 2006 and 2009 is not straightforward. The fall may have been correlated with all manner of changes both in government policy and in the economic and social sphere, but identifying the spurious correlations and separating them from genuine causes is difficult-if not, indeed, impossible. By extension, therefore, the statistic does not actually demonstrate anything, on its own, about human rights performance, because unless the underlying causality is understood, or adequately and persuasively theorized, the quantitatively-measured human rights outcome of 'number of households defined as eligible for assistance against homelessness' cannot be attributed to specific actions of the British State. While, of course, statistical outcomes (if accurately measured and appropriately selected) may reflect the lived experiences of the right-holders in some sense, that does not necessarily permit assessment of compliance with treaty obligations.
This means that the assessment of human rights performance must remain a matter for theory, politics, and, above all, narrative. The promise of statistics to provide an objective basis for assessing compliance (despite the fact that there are some uses for statistics in human rights monitoring) is a mirage. Yet this does not mean that monitoring human rights performance must be an abstract, discursive, and superficial affair. In fact, if anything, it calls for a renewed focus on the individual, because it is at the level of the individual and individuals that assessments about causality can be credibly and sensibly made. That is, the UN human rights system could much more profitably focus its attention on what can be known-whether an individual's human rights were violated-rather than on abstract, aggregated quantitative measurement where causality cannot be plausibly attributed.

II. MONITORING THROUGH OUTCOMES
Contemporary human rights literature tends to take as a given that human rights are to be fulfilled through identifying and realizing desirable outcomes (often conceptualized through ideals about 'human dignity' 16 ) across populations. In this approach, the individual tends to disappear from view, to be replaced by more general, aggregated measurement. While sometimes there is an acknowledgement of the necessity to 'disaggregate' data by sex, ethnicity, and so forth, the unit of primary interest is the group (whether the population at large, or a 'disaggregated' subsection of it) rather than the individual. Arguably the roots of this phenomenon are relatively old ones, dating back to the inception of the modern UN human rights system and the creation of the major treaties. The ICESCR, for instance, places an explicit obligation on States Parties to reduce infant mortality, 17 amongst other things, and elsewhere a similar approach appears through implication: Article 6 of the ICESCR requires States Parties to achieve full employment; Article 24 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) requires States Parties to take measures to combat malnutrition; and Article 10 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) requires States Parties to encourage coeducation. Other examples are scattered through all of the major treaties. These obligations by their nature suggest a system of monitoring which is primarily interested in the aggregate: what is the infant mortality rate? What is the unemployment rate? What proportion of children is malnourished? And so forth.
Yet the view that compliance is something that can be measured through assessing the level of achievement of outcomes has become increasingly fixed institutionally. Relatively early on, the typology of the obligations to 16 20 Despite the fact that rights inhere in individuals, the obligations to protect and fulfil naturally steer the focus of the treaty bodies and States towards the aggregate-towards the way in which the State attempts to create the appropriate environment or strengthen the capacity for individuals to enjoy rights. It hardly requires pointing out that those obligations naturally also imply that measurement is required; how well a given State Party is progressing is a question which is to be at least partially answered through primarily quantitative analysis. It follows that the aim of States Parties should be to improve human rights outcomes, and that the focus should be on State obligations and to what extent they are being fulfilled: this is sometimes called a 'duty-bearer perspective'. 21 The crux of this perspective is that the concern ought not simply to be with enjoyment of rights on the part of the right-holders-that is, ordinary citizens. Its emphasis is rather the efforts which the State puts into achieving those outcomes. 22 In other words, the primary focus is on the measures which the State takes to improve outcomes, rather than individual violations-the interest is not so much in whether given individuals are having their rights violated, but rather whether the State is succeeding in creating an environment in which rights are enjoyed, and in strengthening the capacity for individuals to enjoy their rights. Finally, at a practical level, the UN human rights system is not constitutedeither legally or technically-to be primarily concerned with monitoring compliance with treaty provisions at the individual level. This is a somewhat perverse observation given that, doctrinally at least, the view remains that human rights inhere in the individual rather than the group. Yet the treaty bodies tend to hew towards an aggregate or general perspective because of their role and composition. As a matter of law, violations of given individuals' rights are only currently for the most part relevant in the optional individual communication procedures, because of the manner in which the treaties were created, and as a technical matter the treaty bodies do not in their present form have the capacity or resources to focus their attention on the detail of individual cases. 23 It is natural, then, that in the international human rights system the notion of human rights as Dworkinian protections owned by individuals so as to trump the State should be superseded by a conceptualization of rights as mechanisms for guiding policy: as tools by which to achieve improvement towards agreed outcomes. The protection of the right to health becomes a measurable phenomenon using outcomes such as immunization rates; 24 the right to freedom from torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment becomes partly a matter of assessing improvement in the outcome, 'proportion of women reporting forms of violence against themselves or their children' 25 and so forth. The nature of human rights monitoring changes accordingly.
This in turn has naturally led to an increased interest in measurementparticularly quantitative measurement-of human rights outcomes within the field in general. It manifests itself in the routine work of the UN treaty bodies, as, for instance, when we find the CESCR in its Concluding Observations on the UK's most recent periodic report urging the UK to work towards reducing the wage gap between men and women in the private sector, to provide information on the impact of pension reform on disadvantaged and marginalized groups, and to fulfil its commitment to reducing health inequalities by 10 per cent by 2010. 26 It manifests itself in State reports themselves, as, for example, in the same report, which contains an entire page of extensive statistics regarding maternity and paternity work arrangements ('the average period of maternity pay leave is now six months, up from four months in 2002 … the proportion of dads [sic] taking more than two weeks rose from 22% to 36% in just three years … 77% of new mothers think that fathers are confident of caring for a child' 27 ). It is a dominant theme in the supporting work of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which has been developing, over the preceding decade, a structure and methodology for monitoring human rights performance based on the use of largely quantitative human rights indicators 28 that has been adopted by a number of domestic human rights institutions. 29 This breaks rights down into handfuls of attributes which are then further subdivided into 23

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly structure, process and outcome indicators purporting to evidence commitment, effort and results respectively, all predicated on the previous UN Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights' motto that 'If you don't count it, it won't count.' 30 And it is increasingly a preoccupation in the scholarship of humanrights-focused academics, with outcomes-measurement now a burgeoning field, characterized by an attempt to apply greater rigour and conceptual clarity to the notions of the duty-bearer perspective and progressive realization. Prominent examples include the Cingranelli and Richards' eponymous Human Rights Data Project (the CIRI), 31 and the Index of Social and Economic Rights Fulfillment (SERF Index) project at NYU, which aims to develop not only a measurement tool for economic and social rights fulfilment but also a method for ranking States on the basis of the extent to which they are complying with their obligations under the ICESCR. 32 A further instance is the blossoming field of human rights budget analysis, which has become fashionable not only in the academic sphere, 33 but also in the UN human rights system, 34 and even amongst some domestic human rights institutions. 35 This is undoubtedly part of a broader social-scientific movement towards greater use of 'empirical' methods 36 which has developed in legal scholarship over the past two decades, and must in turn surely be located as part of a wider phenomenon in the humanities and social sciences overall. 37 As elsewhere, a field which was once defined almost exclusively by either doctrinal argument or normative prescription has been transformed into one preoccupied with measurement. Improvement in human rights performance comes in the form of 'better' statistical outcomes which demonstrate that a right (envisioned as a kind of facet in the protection of human dignity, however that is defined) is being fulfilled in the aggregate. A higher proportion of seats in a parliament being held by women and members of 30 OHCHR (n 29). 31  'target groups' indicates the right to participate in public affairs is being fulfilled; 38 a higher proportion of the population using an improved drinking water source indicates improvement regarding the right to adequate housing; 39 an increase in the proportion of adults with a BMI of less than 18.5 indicates failure to protect the right to adequate food; 40 an increase in the waiting list for social housing correlated with lower investment indicates that the State is failing to use its maximum available resources to protect the right to housing, 41 and so forth. Human rights monitoring-whether undertaken by the treaty bodies or by academics or practitioners-is becoming increasingly sophisticated, moving away from its fairly rudimentary roots towards a technical exercise incorporating econometric and statistical methods which purport to revolutionize the manner in which compliance with human rights treaty obligations is assessed. 42 Human rights in turn almost become conceptualized as drivers of public policy: articulations of social justice goals, progress towards which can be quantitatively measured.

III. CAUSALITY AND THE 'OUTCOMES APPROACH'
There has been a level of criticism of this approach. Meckled-Garcia, for instance, sees in the outcomes-view a consequentialist tendency which disrupts the very notion of human rights as rights, 43 whereas Koskenniemi questions a growing managerialist tendency amongst contemporary human rights advocacy, seen most clearly in the move towards human rights 'mainstreaming' a critique which seems by extension to have much to say with respect to the foregoing. 44 This article acknowledges those critiques, but raises an additional epistemic concern: the question of what causes a given human rights outcome is not a trivial one.
In the first place, though, it is necessary to establish why causation matters for an outcomes or duty-bearer approach to human rights monitoring-for typically it is treated somewhat blithely in the field of human rights, where it is generally taken as a given that measured outcomes are attributable to the State. There is a certain doctrinal basis for this. To most human rights scholars, State responsibility engages when a State is in breach of an international obligation, whether through act or omission, and since the core human rights treaties all to some degree or other require State Parties to ensure, protect, 38

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly secure, or promote the rights they contain, 45 then it follows that if those rights are not being ensured, secured, etc, then a violation or violations has taken place for which the State has responsibility. 46 In contemporary human rights law, in other words, the distinction between public and private actors which the Articles on State Responsibility (2001) enshrine effectively disappears. It does not matter that, for instance, a slum clearance leaving people homeless may have been carried out by a private landlord. The State failed to create an environment in which the right to housing was protected, respected and fulfilled-through omission in failing to provide alternative social housing or appropriate legislative protections-and hence it was in violation of its obligations vis-à-vis that right. 47 State responsibility engages almost irrespective of the actor. The tripartite obligations to respect, protect and fulfil reinforce this in suggesting that a State is in violation of its obligations simply by dint of failing to create an environment in which the rights of those in its jurisdiction are protected. It follows that causation can be elided, and it can be readily established that a violation or violations have taken place on the basis of a statistical observation alone. There is objective-seeming evidence that the State is not creating an environment in which rights are enjoyed (or exercising 'due diligence' in preventing private acts which impact on that enjoyment 48 ), whether through act or omission, and hence there is a violation. It follows that States' obligations come to be conceptualized as requirements to improve across statistical measures: the number of households eligible for assistance against homelessness has declined by 43 per cent, ergo the UK is performing well in terms of protecting, respecting and fulfilling the right to housing under Article 11 of the ICESCR. This elision of, or blitheness about, causation results in both conceptual and practical problems. First, simply from a common sense perspective, it is unsatisfactory that any given measure of human rights performance should be disconnected from causal explanations. While, for instance, a fall of 43 per cent in the number of households eligible for assistance against homelessness is to be welcomed, it is surely necessary to understand why that fall took place if either the government concerned or the treaty body monitoring system has any interest at all in causing the number to drop yet further. Second, it clearly runs contrary to widely shared notions of fairness 45 For instance, art 2 of the ICCPR requires States Parties to 'respect and to ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the present Covenant'. 46  and justice to attribute liability, or assign praise, where it is not due. In the long term, it cannot be to the advantage of the UN human rights system in general to undermine its own legitimacy by relying on statistical measurement of 'outcomes' whose underlying causality may be justifiably disputed. And third, it ought to be self-evident that those engaged in the monitoring of human rights should be interested in truth for its own sake.
Yet there are also compelling legal considerations. In the first place, despite there being doctrinal arguments for holding States responsible in general for the extent to which human rights are protected in their jurisdictions, this should not be permitted to vitiate the requirement to establish causal links between State act or omission and the measurement in question. To take a paradigmatic example, the CEDAW plainly assigns responsibility to State Parties in preventing discrimination against women: it requires them to take all appropriate measures to modify or abolish not just discriminatory legislation but also customs and practices constituting discrimination, and also to take appropriate measures to modify 'social and cultural patterns of conduct of men and women' with a view to eliminating prejudices and so forth. 49 The public/private divide is clearly not applicable or relevant with respect to these provisions, and it is tempting to ignore the issue of causation in light of this: if discriminatory practices or attitudes are evidenced statistically, then by definition the State is in violation of such requirements. But this leaves unanswered the critical questions of how discriminatory customs and practices, or social and cultural patterns of conduct, can in fact be modified. What causes a discriminatory practice to develop in the first place? What causes it to continue? And what might cause it to disappear? Our interest in such questions comes not only from a concern with what might constitute best practices or what might be the best policy to implement; it also stems from the nature of States Parties' obligations under the various treaties. This is because, while in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) it is largely implicit, 50 all of the major human rights treaties frame State Party obligations around 'appropriate measures' or similar, in such a way that effectiveness of measures taken must be assessed in order to establish compliance. This is most obvious in the case of the ICESCR, which requires States Parties to takes steps towards progressively realizing the rights contained in the Covenant by all appropriate means. Clearly, the question of whether the steps a State is taking do in fact help progressively realize the relevant rights can only be answered through understanding and assessing the effect of those steps on rights protections. Similarly, the 49 See the CEDAW, arts 2 and 5. 50 Only art 23(4) of the ICCPR mentions 'appropriate steps' (in relation to equality in marriage), but assessing appropriateness/effectiveness of measures seems implicit in the due diligence obligations generally interpreted to be in the Covenant.

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly measurement of effectiveness is immanent in the question of what is or is not 'appropriate'. This requirement is only made more acute by the requirement that States Parties use their 'maximum available resources' to realize Covenant rights. The CRC Committee, whose Covenant contains a similar obligation, has essentially expressed the view that this sort of requirement can be monitored simply by identifying which portions of a State's budget are allocated towards fulfilling rights. 51 Yet, as is often explicitly or implicitly acknowledged, this is only half the story: the requirement is that States take steps towards progressively realizing rights and also spend the maximum available resources on doing so-not merely that they expend the maximum available resources on rights goals. 52 There must be some demonstration that the resources in question are actually being expended in such a way as to progressively realize rights protections. Thus Magdalena Sepúlveda, the former Special Rapporteur on the Question of Human Rights and Extreme Poverty, considers the obligation to mean that expenditures must be shown to be efficient and effective; that corruption must be curbed; that funds assigned to ESC rights purposes must be fully expended for that purpose, and so forth. 53 The CESCR, meanwhile, interprets the obligation as permitting it to take into account whether a State is adopting a measure which 'least restricts Covenant rights' out of those available when assigning resources -and will only view retrogressive steps as permissible if they have been introduced after consideration of all alternatives. 54 Clearly none of this can be achieved without a mechanism for evaluating the impact of resource expenditure on actual rights protections: in other words, the extent to which a given expenditure causes a given outcome. Similar reasoning applies in most other treaty contexts. The CERD, for instance, in Article 2 requires States Parties to undertaking 'appropriate means' to eliminate racial discrimination, including by 'taking effective measures' to amend or rescind regulations which create or perpetuate racial discrimination or encouraging the elimination of barriers between races. measures' to eliminate discrimination against women by any person, organization or enterprise; to 'modify the social and cultural patterns of conduct of men and women'; and to ensure that there are equal rights between men and women in education-amongst many other things. 55 Since these requirements are substantive as well as de jure in character 56 there is inescapably a need to assess the effectiveness or appropriateness of measures taken, which can only be achieved through understanding cause and effect: what, for instance, is the State doing to ensure that there is de facto equality in education, and is it having an impact? This will be a consideration for the vast majority of obligations throughout the core human rights treaties.
A fascinating illustration of the need for understanding cause and effect in establishing whether 'appropriate measures' have been taken is given in the CEDAW Committee's inquiry, based on Article 8 of the Optional Protocol to the CEDAW Convention, into the abduction, rape and murder of women in Northern Mexico. 57 Here, many different measures for preventing genderbased violence in the area of Ciudad Juárez are described and discussed; one example is the introduction of 700 members of the 'preventive federal police' in the city to improve security and provide community support activities to enhance social integration. But in the words of the Committee: There is no consensus between the authorities and non-governmental organizations in their assessment of the federal presence in Ciudad Juárez. The authorities stress that progress has been made in improving security and reducing crime. The non-governmental organizations stress that the presence of the preventive federal police does more to intimidate people than to prevent crime, and that the patrols are more likely to be in areas where robberies occur than in areas where women are at risk. 58 This example neatly demonstrates the difficulty of actually translating treaty requirements into a method for assessing whether a violation has taken place, in the absence of a clear understanding of the underlying mechanisms of cause and effect. As far as the Committee is concerned, State Parties have an obligation arising under the anti-discrimination articles of the Convention to 'take appropriate and effective measures to overcome all forms of genderbased violence, whether by public or private act'. 59 Does the presence of 700 federal police members in Ciudad Juárez qualify as appropriate or effective? Without knowing the actual effects on gender-based violence of the presence of the federal police-that is, without an understanding of the causal mechanisms underlying the rate of gender-based violence in the city-it is 55 CEDAW, arts 2(e), 5(a) and 10. 56

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly impossible to draw any conclusion about its appropriateness or effectiveness, and hence whether Mexico's obligations are being met. This can only be established if it can be plausibly demonstrated that the introduction of the federal police not only is reducing gender-based violence, but is also, critically, more effective than other possible policy measures. Such considerations will, in essence, be true wherever there is an attempt to measure human rights quantitatively, and are of critical importance in the use of indicators: if there is no clear causal link between government policy and an indicator, then the indicator demonstrates nothing about the effectiveness of the policy. This is particularly so where indicators are categorized into structure, process and outcome. Indeed, Donabedian himself, the originator of the OHCHR's much-vaunted model for human rights indicators as it was first used in the field of health care, was quite clear about how crucial it was to establish cause and effect in structure, process and outcome rather than simply to assess them naively or in isolation. 'There must be pre-existing knowledge of the linkage between structure and process, and between process and outcome, before quality assessment can be undertaken.' 60 That is, '[t]he three-part approach to quality assessment is possible only because good structure increases the likelihood of good process, and good process increases the likelihood of a good outcome. It is necessary, therefore, to have established such a relationship before any particular component of structure, process or outcome can be used to assess quality. [Emphasis added.]' 61 In other words, for the structure-process-outcome model to demonstrate anything at all about performance, there must be an understanding of how structural indicators -commitments-bring about better policy ('process'), and how this in turn fosters better results, or 'outcomes'.
This cannot be demonstrated without understanding the underlying causality. Taking an example from the OHCHR's Guide to illustrate, under the right to food an outcome indicator for the 'Nutrition' attribute is 'prevalence of underweight and stunted children under five years of age'. 62 This is directly linked to four process indicators: the proportion of the targeted population brought above the minimum level of dietary energy consumption in the reporting period, the proportion of the population covered under public nutrition supplement programmes, the coverage of public programmes on nutrition education and awareness, and the proportion of the population with access to an improved drinking water source. It is also linked to two process indicators which are shared by all outcome indicators under the right to food: the proportion of received complaints on the right to food which are investigated by the relevant authorities, and the net official development assistance for food 60 ibid. 61  security as a proportion of public expenditure on food security. 63 Setting aside concerns about data collection, the primary concern here must be to what extent the process indicators offered (for instance, the coverage of public programmes on nutrition education and awareness) actually result in-or cause-the outcome, 'prevalence of underweight and stunted children under five years of age'. Without an accurate understanding of this, the process indicator demonstrates effectively nothing (either positive or negative) about performance: it has no usefulness as an assessment tool for actually monitoring the extent to which the State is living up to its obligations as a duty-bearer. It may be that 100 per cent of the population is covered by a public programme on nutrition education and awareness, but unless the effect of that programme on the prevalence of underweight and stunted children under five years of age is actually known, the figure of 100 per cent is simply a statistical observation. It may have a high or low impact on child nutrition, or none at all. (Or the impact could indeed even be negative if the educational content of the programme is erroneous.) The requirement for understanding underlying causality is perhaps at its strongest with respect to human rights budget analysis. Here, again, in the abstract there appears to be a strong case for monitoring via resource allocation, which in practice requires a strong understanding of cause and effect. Kempf, for instance, suggests an 'information pyramid' approach which divides rights into three tiers-key measures, expanded indicators, and context. 64 The middle of these typically involves measuring government expenditure so as to give a 'more in-depth understanding of the forces at work behind the key indicator'. 65 This would result, for example, in the right to education being measured through the literacy rate (Tier 1); government expenditure on education, transport and lunch programmes (Tier 2); and case studies (Tier 3). 66 Here, clearly, there is a requirement to understand how government expenditure results in the literacy rate being what it is, and how increases or decreases in government expenditure affect it; the relationship between expenditure on education and literacy must be known in order to provide a proper and accurate assessment of performance. If, for instance, expenditure is wasted on ineffective teaching (which is a perennial problem in the developing world 67 ), then it is unlikely on its face to contribute to improving the literacy rate. On the other hand, improvements in the literacy 63

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly rate may be unrelated to government expenditure where, for instance, private schools and tutors are widely used. 68 This kind of consideration will always be necessary when attempting to analyse budgets from a human rights perspective in detail; it is the matter of only brief moments of thought to generate examples of why credible causal inferences are required if monitoring is to be performed through statistical outcomes. How does government expenditure on a given programme affect the unemployment rate? How would the unemployment rate have changed if expenditure had been different? How does expenditure on a given aspect of health care improve waiting times for routine operations? What if the money had been spent in a different way? If a local education authority approves the building of a new school where the old one was growing decrepit, is this a more suitable expenditure than using the money to employ more teachers? Which option has the most impact on literacy rates? These sorts of questions are inherent in any exercise which seeks to establish whether the best alternative has been chosen, or expenditures are efficient and effective. Yet they cannot be assessed without understanding how the respective human rights outcomes are caused. This is doubly the case where analysts seek to 'disaggregate' expenditure for the purposes of, for instance, 'genderresponsive budgeting' or similar 69 -which means examining, for instance, what was a given budgetary item's impact on gender inequality or people with disabilities. 70 For such measures, a sophisticated understanding not only of the impact of funding in general but also of its impact on the disaggregated group is also required-effectively doubling the analytical workload.
Finally, it bears emphasizing that if States have obligations to protect, respect and fulfil rights to the extent that the treaty bodies have generally argued, and especially where the text of a treaty provision suggests that there is no distinction to be made between public and private actors in terms of State responsibility, then much of the above discussion also holds true with respect to causality and the role of non-State actors. What roles private actors play in causing measured outcomes-and to what extent the actions of private actors are in turn 'caused' or contributed to by the State-are, of course, questions giving rise to a similar set of considerations, and this creates yet another layer of complexity and further requirements to demonstrate and understand cause and effect.
It is not just from practical and conceptual perspectives, then, that a failure to properly address matters of causation is problematic: it poses critical problems for the legal questions of whether a State is enacting appropriate or effective 68  measures to achieve human rights protections. And as we shall now see, the apparent blitheness about causation serves to mask a host of difficulties associated with an outcomes-approach to human rights monitoring.

IV. THE PROBLEM OF CAUSALITY AND CREDIBLE CAUSAL INFERENCE
In recent decades, there has been a strong movement in econometrics, policy studies, and related fields, away from what might be called a naïve regression-based view of causation. This naïve view was perhaps most prominently and succinctly expressed by Leamer in his famous article 'Let's Take the Con out of Econometrics'. 71 Leamer used an illustrative analogy of a comparison between an agricultural experimenter and an econometrician. The agricultural experimenter divides a farm into smaller plots of land and randomly selects which he will fertilize; if some plots are fertilized but some not, the difference in mean yield between the fertilized and the non-fertilized plots will be a measure of the effect of fertilizer on agricultural yields. This is the way econometricians like to think of themselves, according to Leamer, but in fact this is 'grossly misleading'. Rather: The applied econometrician is like a farmer who notices that the yield is somewhat higher under trees where birds roost, and he uses this as evidence that bird droppings increase yields. However, when he presents this finding at the annual meeting of the American Ecological Association, another farmer in the audience objects that he used the same data but came up with the conclusion that moderate amounts of shade increase yields. A bright chap in the back of the room then observes that these two hypotheses are indistinguishable, given the available data. He mentions the phrase 'identification problem', which, though no one knows quite what he means, is said with such authority that it is totally convincing. 72 The econometricians, in other words, do not understand that it is generally impossible to know or demonstrate convincingly what causes a statistical pattern through analysis of data that is not the product of a controlled experiment. The agricultural experimenter uses the nearest thing possible to a laboratory experiment, and his inferences about the effect of fertilization on crop yields are convincing. The econometrician attempts to infer causation from noticing a statistical pattern, but other econometricians infer different causal mechanisms and there is no way to distinguish between their competing 71 E Leamer, 'Let's Take the Con out of Econometrics'

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly causal claims. A similar process takes place in the monitoring of human rights by statistics: a fall in the number of households requiring assistance against homelessness is observed. Different observers may, however, infer different causal mechanisms, and there is no objective method to prefer one to another. This is, of course, essentially a restatement of what David Hume had demonstrated philosophically in the mid-eighteenth century, which is that we can never 'by our utmost scrutiny discover any thing but one event following another'. 73 That is, causality can never be proven, because there may always be hidden or unmeasurable conditionals affecting a given outcome. The laboratory experiment, which allows the measurement of known variables through holding others constant, is a suitable and practical method of diminishing the problem, but beyond the laboratory making causal inferences is fraught with problems. 74 Without straying too far into technical detail, regression analysis is often used as a tool for solving the problems social scientists encounter when attempting to isolate the effect of a variable. In layman's terms, a regression analysis is a method of investigating relationships between variables, but typically it means seeking to ascertain causal effects, such as the effect of price on demand. 75 An example might be a model which attempts to measure the relationship between unemployment and the suicide rate; typically this would take the form of a 'multiple regression' which aimed to control for other independent variables than unemployment (eg sex, age, etc) in an attempt to determine how unemployment impacts on the suicide rate in isolation from other factors. It is, in other words, an attempt by a statistician to move away from the position of the farmer who observes the correlation between roosting birds and high crop yields, and towards the position of the agricultural experimenter who manipulates one variable-fertilization-while holding the others constant.
At root, the use of multiple regression analysis as a tool for inferring causation is predicated on measuring the effect of one variable while controlling for other variables-purely through statistical manipulation. The endeavour is always confounded, then, by the problem that not all other variables are necessarily known: indeed, it is not logically possible to be sure that all variables have been identified. This results in two insurmountable barriers to making credible causal inferences through statistical analysis alone.
The first of these is the problem of omitted variable bias: since controlling for all other relevant variables cannot be done-or at least, the statistician can never be sure that all other relevant variables have been controlled for-the results of the regression analysis could always potentially have been biased by the fact that there is a hidden conditional affecting the outcome. An illustrative example given by King and Keohane is a hypothetical study of sub-Saharan African States which finds that coups d'état appear more frequently where regimes are repressive. It is plausible, however, that high unemployment may be associated with an increased probability of both coups d'état and political repression. 76 Such a study would therefore need to control for unemployment, but it would not be possible to do this if accurate unemployment figures were unavailable. Even if those figures were available and the unemployment variable controlled for, however, the researchers may have overlooked the effect of another variable that might plausibly have an effect on the frequency of coups d'état: the independence of the military. They may find some way to control for that variable also, but then overlook the level of salary that soldiers could expect; dissatisfaction amongst soldiers may also have an effect on the likelihood of a coup d'état occurring. And so forth. The list of omitted potential variables may go on ad infinitum. And second, since the list of omitted potential variables may go on indefinitely, the results of a naïve regression-based analysis can always be disputed-as Leamer so aptly demonstrated: another scholar can always examine the same set of data and come up with a competing interpretation, with no means of deciding whose interpretation is preferable. This is largely the reason why so many perennial and widespread social debates have never been resolved, despite huge arsenals of statistical 'evidence' arrayed on either side: Pfaff gives the American-centric examples of whether the death penalty deters crime or whether gun ownership increases violence; 77 other examples might be whether abortion has any effect on the crime rate, 78 whether the minimum wage affects employment, 79 or whether microfinance actually helps the very poor. 80 Both 'sides' in such debates find it straightforward to identify omitted variables in each other's data, and to identify their own correlations which confirm their existing biases, so neither is ever in a position to cede defeat. 81 76

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly As well as the issue of variables being unknown is the question of how variables interact. JS Mill referred to this problem as the 'intermixture of effects', 82 although it is more commonly referred to in the modern day as the problem of endogeneity. Put briefly, what Mill observed was that, when confronted with complexity, there is a tendency to attempt to single out 'from the multitude of antecedent circumstances' one condition as a potential cause, and then to measure it. 83 In fact, however, 'causes' may interfere with one another; they are not discrete, but intermingled. Manzi uses the example of attempting to assess the impact of brand difference on sales in shops, holding all other factors equal. A possible variable likely to affect sales is the presence of an ATM in a shop, and this therefore needs to be held constant if we are interested in measuring the impact of brand difference alone. But this may have different effects in different contexts: in a large shop, having an ATM may drive sales because it draws in customers, but in a small shop, having an ATM may reduce sales because it increases crowding near the cash register that discourages customers. Yet 'holding the presence of an ATM constant' in a typical regression equation only allows either a positive or negative coefficient for that variable-either an ATM is present in a shop or not. This does not capture the way the variable changes according to context. This problem is remedied by adding further interaction terms: replacing 'ATM in shop' with other variables such as 'ATM in shop AND shop is large' and 'ATM in shop AND shop is small', and so forth. But interactionswith-interactions can quickly become myriad: an ATM may increase net sales in large shops, but not when at a highway rest stop (motorway services, in British parlance)-so there would need to be further interaction terms: 'ATM in shop AND shop is large AND shop is in highway rest stop', and so forth. Interaction effects always tend to proliferate, and to do so exponentially. 84 For a typical example of how extreme these effects can become, Ho and Rubin discuss how introducing covariates for sentence length by month; and age, employment status, sex, prior strikes and marital status of prisoner, result in 69 million different parameters when attempting to measure the effect of prisoner classification status on misconduct. 85 The problem of endogeneity gives the lie to the notion, sometimes advanced in the literature, that the issue is one of counterfactuals: if only there was some way to know what would have happened had circumstances been different, causality could be observed. 86 The truth is even more complex: since variables interact, the mere act of controlling one variable may bias others. These and similar problems 87 have led to widespread acceptance in various disciplines that the 'age of regression' is over. 88 The kind of naïve use of regression analysis that sees scholars attempting to isolate and measure the effects of variables in a data set is no longer generally viewed as being a credible way to draw causal inferences except in limited cases. Instead, there has been a proliferation in past decades of what are often referred to as 'quasi-experimental techniques': better methods for replicating, or approximating, what goes on in the laboratory or the agricultural experimenter's field. 89 The most widely known of these is the 'gold standard' of the randomized field trial, which is essentially what Leamer's agricultural experimenter was performing, and which is used to some effect in the fields of medicine and public health: here, a group of like subjects are identified and randomly separated into a test group and a control group, with the test group having one variable manipulated so as to isolate its effects. This has not changed in principle since the experiments of James Lind to discover the effect of citrus juice on combating scurvy. While the randomized field trial is by no means perfect even in the field of medicine, 90 through widespread, continuous and rigorous replication it can ultimately persuasively demonstrate causality. This is because, with a large enough initial group which is then randomly assigned into test and control groups, and with good experimental design, it can be assumed that differences between individuals even out and the test and control groups are comparable in all other respects than the variable of interest, which is being manipulated for the test group.
In the social sciences, however, randomized field trials tend to be difficult to perform-usually because costs are prohibitive (although there are increasingly innovative ways of carrying out such experiments 91 ). Where trials cannot take place, experimenters use various methods to attempt to replicate something approaching a randomized field trial through intervening in the data. One prominent method is what is called 'regression discontinuity analysis', which takes advantage of a natural break or discontinuity in the data to measure effects around it. Perhaps the most famous and frequently cited example of 87 Other examples include unwarranted assumptions about linearity and homogeneity. 88

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly this is Angrist and Lavy's study of class sizes in Israeli schools. 92 In the Israeli public education system there was a strict cap on classroom sizes at 40 students, meaning that if in a given year there was an enrolment of 41 or greater at a school, the students would be split into two classes-for instance of 20 and 21. If on the other hand there was an enrolment of 39, the students would remain in one class. Since it is plausible that abilities of students do not greatly vary on average, year on year, and it is plausible that a cohort of 41 students will have similar average ability to a cohort of 39, it is credible that measuring the academic achievements of classes of 20 versus classes of 39 will demonstrate the effect of class size on academic achievement. And, indeed, it seemed that students in smaller class sizes tended to perform better than those in larger ones. Since nowadays there is simply vastly more data available than there once was, discovering discontinuities and taking advantage of them to measure their effects is becoming more easily achieved. This increasing use of experimental and quasi-experimental data has led some to claim that there is a 'credibility revolution' taking place in empirical economics and related fields 93 -although it is important to note that there remains a strong level of scepticism. 94 Yet this same credibility revolution does not yet seem to have crept into the field of international law in general or international human rights monitoring in particular, where naïve statistical observations and regression analysis are typically unquestioningly treated as demonstrative of causality (if causality is addressed at all). 95 There is usually scant attention paid to issues such as the identification problem or omitted variables bias in the literature, and indeed correlations are very often presented as prima facie indicative of causation. This is most evident in the State reports, and indeed the UK's 2009 report to the CESCR is an illustration par excellence of this: a mirage of meretricious statistical observations provided so as to create a spurious sense of compliance. Yet it is also in general true of the academic work, which remains rooted in the 'age of regression', left behind by developments in other fields. And, indeed, there are persuasive reasons for arguing that, except perhaps in the very long term, there are no reasons to assume that a 'credibility revolution' can ever in fact take place in the arena of human rights monitoring. Let us now turn to addressing why this should be the case. There are two core reasons, or groups of reasons, for having severe doubts about the applicability of quasi-experimental techniques as a method of resolving the problems associated with quantitative human rights measurement. These are complexities arising from the continuing 'black box' nature of causality, 96 and the connected problem of good research design.
First, it is well acknowledged that even where robust results are generated by experimental or quasi-experimental techniques, the causal mechanism does not simply emerge by default. Very often, the results lead to murky conclusions, or no conclusions at all. A classic example of this problem is cited by Manzi, who describes a 2009 study which tested the effect of free primary medical care for a sample of 1,300 test patients versus a randomized control group in Ghana. 97 The results indicated that adult guardians of patients in the test group reported in diaries that they brought their children to more formal health care visits, but relied less on informal, traditional healers. Yet there was no statistically significant improvement in health outcomes for the test group versus the control group. How to interpret these results? Why did free primary medical care apparently not cause any improvement in health? Manzi lists four possible theories: the marginal value of increased health care spending has very little effect (a common observation made in developed economies); traditional healing remedies are undervalued (the test group used traditional healers less, so the results may indicate there is no difference between Western medicine and traditional health care methods in the area); standards of care in Ghanaian clinics are very poor (so attending a clinic has no or little value); and that parents lied when filling in diaries in order to demonstrate they were doing something socially reliable, but were not actually taking their children to formal health care visits in the frequency suggested (indicating free primary care was not a sufficient incentive to attend). There are undoubtedly more. The results, in other words, provide no basis for conclusions about the impact of free primary medical care, and no evidence on which to formulate health care policy or assign funding, without theoretical explanations-but there are competing theoretical explanations which are in large part dependent on pre-existing biases and which are all to some degree or other plausible. 98 Most tellingly, the results of the study do not even provide us with evidence about the most fundamental matter of all-whether spending on 96

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International and Comparative Law Quarterly health care has any impact on health outcomes or not. If anybody wished to assess, therefore, whether Ghana had enacted appropriate or effective measures regarding the right to health, to the maximum of its available resources, the results of this study would provide no resolution whatsoever. Similarly, the Angrist and Lavy study relies on an understanding of the Israeli education system combined with a relatively straightforward and plausible theoretical proposition: that in a smaller class, individual students tend to receive more attention and hence perform better on average. Its results alone do not suggest a causal mechanism: causality must be theorized. When similar studies take place in other jurisdictions, where conditions are different, other results may appear which need to be theorized in turn. A similar project to Angrist and Lavy's took place in Chile almost a decade later; its different results were plausibly suggested by the authors as being due to the fact that in the Chilean school system wealthier parents have opportunities to send their children to schools which they know will have smaller class sizes-an 'enrolment manipulation' phenomenon which contaminates the findings. 99 But again, this observation came from familiarity with the Chilean school system itself, combined with a theoretical explanation-it did not simply emerge magically from the data.
What this suggests, of course, is that there is no substitute for substantive, deep and expert knowledge of the subject matter at hand-especially when it comes to interpreting data. Contrary to the claims of, for instance, the OHCHR that quantitative measurements provide objective, transparent and credible methods for monitoring human rights performance, 100 in actual fact it is typically the familiarity of the researcher with the subject matter at hand, combined with a plausible theoretical explanation of causation, which makes a statistically-based claim credible. In the absence of a persuasive theoretical causal explanation-an answer to the question, 'How?'-then an observation remains at best only a proposition about correlation. 101 It also suggests that, as is well understood in the field of public health, in order for experimental or quasi-experimental techniques to provide robust evidence for cause and effect, there must be consistent, and repeated, replication in a variety of contexts. Otherwise results which may appear initially convincing could be due to environmental factors whose effects are not observed. Angrist and Lavy's study may allow credible, or at least plausible, inference of causality, in a narrow context, but a naïve conclusion drawn from it (small class sizes result in better academic achievement) may be limited to the social, cultural and temporal context in which it takes place. While the Chilean study in a sense supports the Angrist and Lavy study (it indicates that, intuitively at least, parents prefer their 99  children to be in smaller classes-presumably because they 'know' it makes for better academic achievement), it may not always and everywhere be true. Different educational systems have different characteristics and different methods of teaching. 102 Repeating the experiment in a variety of different contexts makes the conclusion more robust if similar results are discovered elsewhere. This is doubly necessary where there simply is no agreed theoretical explanation for the results, as in the case of free primary medical care in Ghana. Only widespread, consistent, repeated experimental or quasi-experimental results which seem to indicate persistent correlations between a policy measure and a certain effect will prove to be credible.
What this means is that, even if human rights scholars and the UN system were to move away from naïve statistical tools, they would be unlikely to receive any benefits from this putative 'credibility revolution' except perhaps on an ad hoc basis. It is an extremely complex task to identify causal mechanisms in a credible fashion in fairly narrow contexts-let alone across a scope as large as that of an international human rights treaty. And this in turn means that using the results of experimental or quasi-experimental studies as bases for measuring human rights performance is fiendishly difficult when considered in detail.
To continue with the class-size example, the notion that smaller class sizes tend to result in better academic achievement, all else being equal, may have been plausibly demonstrated to be true in the Israeli education system at least. Yet this does not make, for instance, 'average primary school class size' a suitable indicator of performance against the right to education: in a jurisdiction such as Chile, such an indicator would not capture the fact that small class sizes could primarily be composed of students from wealthier backgrounds. It would therefore not suggest a great deal about protection of the right to education; wealthier students tending to end up with a better educational experience is not, one would suggest, of interest regarding that particular right. It is also, naturally, contingent on teacher quality, which can be assumed to be relatively high in Israel, but much less so in other environments. 103 If such difficulties of conceptualization can occur with such a relatively straightforward-seeming measure, one can imagine the complexities surrounding the measurement of Ghana's performance regarding the right to health if the apparently obvious-seeming 'availability of free primary medical care' was selected as a measure or indicator. Put simply, nobody knows whether making free primary medical care available in Ghana improves health outcomes for children-at least based on the available study.
But perhaps above all, this fundamental complexity mitigates against accurate statistical human rights measurement because of the expense in time and monetary resources necessary to generate robust and reliable results on which to base it-especially given that reliable results require extensive and widespread replication. The treaty bodies have limited time to investigate the statistics and studies laid before them by States Parties and NGOs (and indeed, generally do not currently see this as their role) and human rights scholars with the necessary training and skills to critique the research design of others are few and far between. States Parties clearly do not have strong incentives to fund or conduct robust human-rights-specific research. The idea that appropriate and effective measures for the protection of human rights could be guided by extensive use of experimental and quasi-experimental techniques is therefore simply not realistic in the short or medium term.
The prospect of statistical measures and econometric tools revolutionizing the practice of human rights monitoring, then, is a mirage. Yet it is not merely a harmless illusion, for two important reasons.
The first of these is straightforward: there is an opportunity cost, in time and other resources, associated with the move towards statistical analysis. Time spent running regressions is time lost investigating human rights violations, promoting human rights, better theorizing or conceptualizing human rights, or engaging in deep study of social phenomena. This may seem a trite observation, but it is one which is not sufficiently frequently made.
The second of these is more pernicious. As has already been alluded to, States Parties to human rights treaties have every incentive to make it appear as though they are in compliance with their treaty obligations, and the more that human rights performance becomes seen as quantitatively measurable, the more States will rely on statistical 'evidence' to demonstrate improved performance. Yet, as this article has sought to demonstrate, and as social scientists are increasingly willing to acknowledge, statistical 'evidence' in the social sphere is often bogus (usually being comprised of correlations without a credible causal explanation), and this has two particularly dangerous consequences for human rights monitoring. On the one hand, reliance on statistical measures allows States to game the system by using apparently neutral and objectiveseeming veils of numbers to demonstrate compliance-a particular problem where, as in the UN treaty system, States Parties are encouraged to develop their own sets of indicators and cite their own statistics. It hardly needs explaining why this might result in the undesirable situation that States Parties simply select the measures that appear to show improvement, irrespective of cause. The intellectual dishonesty of the UK's State representative to the CESCR claiming credit for a larger number of men taking paternity leave is a typical example of this. As well as having little to do with the actual performance of States Parties, such manipulation hardly contributes to a sense that human rights monitoring is a legitimate and robust exercise. The fact that 'good governance' and, by extension, evidence of good human rights The Problem of Causality in International Human Rights Law performance is so frequently a stated or implied consideration of donors regarding the provision of aid clearly also has the potential to affect the incentives of developing States engaged in that process. 104 And on the other hand, the fundamentally contingent and complex nature of attempting to ascribe causality makes it fairly straightforward to undermine or dispute statistical measurements, on the basis of omitted or intermixed variables, or for other flaws in research design. This makes it simple for States Parties to simply explain away measurements which appear to demonstrate lack of compliance. In other words, naïve use of statistical measurement makes it easy for States Parties to muddy the waters of the reporting procedures, whether by using statistics to 'buffer away' close monitoring, or by exploiting the contingent nature of statistical measurement of performance to undermine the monitoring process entirely. 105 The 'manufacturing of uncertainty' is hardly unknown in the field of regulation, and it would be naïve to expect that matters should be different in that of human rights monitoring. 106

VI. CONCLUSION: REFOCUSING ON THE INDIVIDUAL?
What are the lessons, then, for human rights monitoring? First, there must be a stronger emphasis placed on good fieldwork, and on the expert fieldworker. If developments in the social sciences in recent decades have taught us anything, it is that even the most robust, well-designed and widely replicated studies do not generate meaningful results without an appropriate interpretation from an expert or experts with deep knowledge of the subject at hand. Simply put, there is no substitute for embedded local knowledge giving a plausible theory about causality. The reason why, for instance, free primary medical care in a region of Ghana appears to have no effect on health outcomes-opaque to those engaged in carrying out the experiment-may be clear to the fieldworker whose familiarity with the social context permits them to give plausible interpretations of the results. This means that, contrary to the implied rejections of 'subjective' or narrative expert assessments present in much of the work on statistical human rights measurement, 107 the reality is that if statistical measurement of human rights performance is to be attempted, then typically only experts with (subjectively generated) explanatory theories can offer plausible interpretations of the results. What this also means is that apparently 'judgement-proof' methods such as human rights indicators and statistical measures, which might appear to allow objective measurement which bypasses the need for time-consuming and unreliable subjective expert judgement, in reality offer very little.
The second lesson is that there is a need for a renewed focus on individual human rights violations, rather than outcomes. There is a temptation to conclude that, since quantitative measurement of human rights performance is concrete and objective, the alternative is for human rights monitoring to simply descend into a morass of subjective and hence opaque and unreliable judgement-making based on narrative accounts. 108 Yet there is no need for this to be the case: in fact, since purportedly 'objective' quantitative measurement is itself so unreliable, a retreat from it may have the effect of making human rights monitoring more robust. As long ago as 1996 Chapman was making the observation that, given the difficulties of statistical measurement of economic and social rights performance, it was both more practical and more moral to concentrate on individual violations rather than to pursue the quixotic goal of monitoring 'progressive realisation' (or what may be thought of as the modern 'outcomes' approach 109 ). Despite 20 years having passed since the article was published, most of Chapman's comments regarding measurement of development, as we have seen, remain true: it is 'unrealistic and impossible to handle' 110 due to the difficulties and costs of analysing the available data. At that time the treaty bodies were still relying on physical records with almost no computerization, of course, but as this article has sought to demonstrate, the problems run much deeper than a mere lack of computational speed-and Chapman's conclusions remain trenchant.
The first of these conclusions was that since identification of violations was much more straightforward than assessing performance through the use of statistics, it was simply a more effective method for evaluation. Chapman herself eventually retreated from this position 111 and, indeed, what came to be known as 'the violations approach' ultimately resulted in a perpetuation of many of the problems identified in this article: a focus on statistical measures and a naïve understanding of causality. The Maastricht Guidelines, which stemmed from the original article, assume, for instance, that it is possible to tell what 'appropriate steps' are, and seek to make the failure to develop and human rights treaties, because it easily allows them to produce bogus 'evidence' of improved performance based on meretricious 'objective'-seeming data, which the treaty bodies have little time or inclination to critically analyseand in turn to problematize evidence of compliance gaps. And third, blitheness about the complexities of human rights protection undoubtedly has a serious and large opportunity cost, as academics, practitioners and activists focus their attentions on the production of statistical measurements and econometric analyses, and correspondingly neglect other-possibly more effective-approaches. The monitoring of human rights has become increasingly quantitative, and all trends indicate that it is likely to become more so. Yet it would behove those engaged in the process to consider developments outside of the field and ask whether, in fact, that trend is leading towards a cul-de-sac from which economists and other social scientists have retreated.