Date: 2020
Type: Book
A matter of style? : organizational agency in global public policy
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2020, Cambridge Studies in Comparative Public Policy
BAYERLEIN, Louisa, KNILL, Christoph, STEINEBACH, Yves, A matter of style? : organizational agency in global public policy, Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2020, Cambridge Studies in Comparative Public Policy
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/67975
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
International public administrations (IPAs) have become an essential feature of global governance, contributing to what some have described as the 'bureaucratization of world politics'. While we do know that IPAs matter for international politics, we neither know exactly to what extent nor how exactly they matter for international organizations' policy making processes and subsequent outputs. This book provides an innovative perspective on IPAs and their agency in introducing the concept of administrative styles to the study of international organizations and global public policy. It argues that the administrative bodies of international organizations can develop informal working routines that allow them to exert influence beyond their formal autonomy and mandate. The theoretical argument is tested by an encompassing comparative assessment of administrative styles and their determinants across eight IPAs providing rich empirical insight gathered in more than 100 expert interviews.
Table of Contents:
-- 1. Introduction: Of Illusory Giants and Dwarfs: Do International Public Administrations Matter for Policy Making Beyond the Nation-State?
-- 2. Conceptualizing and Explaining Bureaucratic Influence: Administrative Styles
-- 3. Observing and Explaining Administrative Styles: From Concept to Empirical Analysis
-- 4. The IMF and the UNHCR: Entrepreneurial Administrations with Different Levels of Formal Autonomy
-- 5. The IOM and the FAO as Consolidators: Struggles of the Challenger and the Challenged
-- 6. Advocacy at UNEP and the WHO: How Expertise and Common Beliefs Shape an Administrative Style
-- 7. NATO and the ILO As Servants: The Dedicated Steward and the Saturated Dinosaur
-- 8. Conclusion: Real Dwarfs, Illusory Dwarfs, or Even Giants? International Public Administrations as Actors in Global Governance
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/67975
ISBN: 9781108836371
Publisher: Cambridge University Press