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Managing money and discord in the UN : budgeting and bureaucracy / Ronny Patz and Klaus H. Goetz.

Oxford Scholarship Online: Political Science Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Patz, Ronny, author.
Goetz, Klaus H., author.
Series:
Transformations in governance.
Oxford scholarship online.
Transformations in governance
Oxford scholarship online
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United Nations--Finance.
United Nations.
Physical Description:
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white).
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2019.
Summary:
This work studies the budgeting procedures in over 20 organizations of the United Nations system, in particular of the UN in New York, ILO and WHO in Geneva, and UNESCO in Paris.
Contents:
List of figures
List of tables
List of abbreviations. 1 Introduction: budgeting in the UN system : Resourcing international organizations in a changing global system
Why study budgeting in the UN system?
Disciplinary foundations
Conceptual innovations, key questions, and methodological approach
Main findings and overview. 2 Theory: understanding budgeting in international organizations : Conceptualizing budgets and budgeting in IOs
Key condition I: principal complexity in IO budgeting
Key condition II: agency complexity in IO budgeting
Outcome 1: increased proceduralization
Outcome 2: challenged routinization
Outcome 3: budgetary segmentation
Overall theoretical framework and summary. 3 The historical origins of UN system budgeting : From theoretical framework to historical narrative
Budgeting in pre-World War I international unions
Budgeting in the League of Nations
The post-World War II UN budget system
Conclusions. 4 Budgeting in the UN system: a comparative analysis : A comparative analysis of UN system budgeting: case selection and methods
Budgeting procedures in the UN system: similar processes and limited principal-agent complexity
Proceduralization of budgeting in the UN system: still the standard model?
Budget routines in the UN system 2006-15: stability and shifting timelines
Budgetary segmentation: peacekeeping budgeting as an exception to the rule?
Summary of findings
Outlook and selection of case studies
Annex 1: documents and document studies
Annex 2: budget rules and composition of UN boards
Annex 3: budget procedures in the UN and twelve specialized agencies (1989, 2003, 2016/17)
Annex 4: budget routinization in the UN and twelve specialized agencies (2006-15)
Annex 5: budget routinization in the UN funds and programmes (2006-15). 5 The UN core: micromanaging principals and segmented budgets : Introduction
FInancial situation of the UN
Methods and data
UN member states as complex principal: group politics, state interests, and the P5
The UN secretariat between fragmentation and central coordination
Proceduralization and the geopolitics of micromanagement
Routinization under pressure and Secretary-General intervention
Segmentation beyond peacekeeping: from budget sections to SPM budgeting
Conclusions. 6 ILO: simple procedures despite a tripartite principal : Introduction
Financial situation of the ILO
methods and data
Principal complexity beyond tripartism
Successive decentralization, but limited agency complexity
Proceduralization and early intervention mechanisms
Challenges in the shadow of routinization
Differentiated effects of principal complexity and limited budgetary segmentation
Conclusions. 7 UNESCO: between sectoral fragmentation and budget crisis : Introduction
Financial situation of UNESCO
Principal complexity: US exceptionalism, entrenched group politics, and non-state actors
Sectoral fragmentation, the creation of institutes, and agency complexity
Questionnaires, regional consultations, and informal proceduralization
Routinazation at what cost? Lessons from UNESCO's post-2011 financial crisis
Managing budgetary segmentation: towards the introduction of a structured financing dialogue
Conclusions. 8 WHO: between regional principals and philanthrolaterialism : Introduction
Financial situation of the WHO
Regionalized principal structures and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Regional fragmentation and networked bureaucratic coordination
Regionalized budgeting and extensive proceduralization
From routinization of budgeting to coordinated resource mobilization
Earmarking, budgetary segmentation, and the funding of health emergencies
Conclusions. 9 Key findings: principal-agent complexity and budgeting in the UN system : Main insights
Complex principal-agent constellations and the effects of principal pathology
The UN budget system between segmentation, fragmentation, and interdependence
UN bureaucracies as complex actors in global policymaking
From multi-disciplinary foundations to UN system budgeting and back: key contributions to the literature. 10 The future of UN budgeting: complexity and prospect for reform. References
List of documents
List of interviews
Index.
Notes:
This edition previously issued in print: 2019.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-19-257532-5
0-19-187467-1
0-19-257533-3

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