Transforming International Institutions: How Money Quietly Sidelined Multilateralism at the United Nations


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Transforming International Institutions illuminates how a slow, quiet, subterranean process can produce big, radical change in international institutions and organizations. Drawing on historical institutionalism and interpretive tools of international law, Graham provides a novel theory of uncoordinated change over time. It highlights how early participants in a process who do not foresee the transformative potential of their acts, but nonetheless enable subsequent actors to push change in new directions to profound effect.

Graham deploys this to explain how changes in UN funding rules in the 1940s and 1960sâ€"perceived as small and made to solve immediate political disagreementsâ€"ultimately sidelined multilateral governance at the United Nations in the twenty-first century. The perception of funding rules as marginal to fundamental principles of governance, and the friendly orientation of change-initiators toward the UN, enabled this quiet transformation.

Challenging the UN's reputation for rigidity and its status as a bastion of egalitarian multilateralism, Transforming International Institutions demonstrates that the UN system is susceptible to subtle change processes and that its egalitarian multilateralism governs only a fraction of the UN's operational work.

Author: Erin R. Graham
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 10/31/2023
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 8.90h x 6.40w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9780198877943
ISBN10: 0198877943
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | International Relations | General
- Business & Economics | International | General
- Political Science | Public Policy | Economic Policy