The Platonic Acorn: A Case Study of the United Nations Volunteers
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Published:1974
Issue:3
Volume:28
Page:375-397
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ISSN:0020-8183
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Container-title:International Organization
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int Org
Abstract
This article presents both a history and an administrative analysis of the United Nations Volunteers, an international organization established by a General Assembly resolution in December 1970. The hope that the new organization would presage a new era of multinational volunteerism has proven groundless. In seeking to explain the ineffectiveness of the UN Volunteers, I look inside the organization and find that it has little or no control over its six principal functions. This extreme decentralization of responsibility is then explained not by a static description of the institutional but by focusing on the dynamic process by which state and transnational actors exercised influence during the different stages of the organization's establishment and development. Those actors whose autonomy was most jeopardized by a new volunteer organization were most active in defining and limiting the scope of its operations. The relative lobbying advantages of state and transnational actors meshed with bureaucratic and budgetary constraints to ensure an enfeebled organization.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference5 articles.
1. Roosevelt Curtis , “The Political Future of Transnational Associations: The Opportunity for Effective NGO Action,” International Associations, June–July 1972, pp. 329–32.
2. The Peace Corps: Making It in the Seventies
Cited by
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