“…A rich IR literature examines the use and efficacy of a variety of naming and shaming instruments, ranging from formal resolutions, blacklists, and targeted sanctions to discursive representations that impose reputational costs such as social opprobrium on targets. While states are adept users of naming and shaming as documented in this literature (Ausderan, ; Biersteker, ; de Goede, ; Lebovic & Voeten, ), a robust scholarship centers on its use by nonstate actors (NSAs), particularly nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), in the arena of human rights (Bell & Carens, ; Bob, ; Hill, Moore, & Mukherjee, ; Keck & Sikkink, ; Meernik, Aloisi, Sowell, & Nichols, ; Murdie & Peksen, ; Ron, Ramos, & Rodgers, ). Despite the centrality accorded to NGOs in promulgating human rights norms through naming and shaming, the literature provides a rudimentary understanding of their underlying motivations, assessment, and conceptualization of this tool.…”