Titill: | The interlinkages of design and effectiveness of governing bodies in the United Nations development system |
Höfundur: | |
Leiðbeinandi: | Klaus Goetz, Bernhard Zangl |
Útgáfa: | 2025 |
Tungumál: | Enska |
Umfang: | 213 |
Háskóli/Stofnun: | Ludwig-Maximilians-University |
Svið: | Félagsvísindasvið |
Deild: | Department of Political Science |
Efnisorð: | Doktorsritgerðir; Leikreglur; Stjórnskipulag alþjóðastofnana; IO governance; Rules of the game |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/5560 |
Útdráttur:Multilateralism is encountering strong political headwinds at both the global and national level. The high
economic, social and environmental costs of recurrent crises like the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine,
and climate change, have led to growing questions about the performance legitimacy of multilateralism. Many
multilateral institutions are no longer felt to be able to deliver the public value which was their original
reason for being. The UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, in Our Common Agenda, has called for a
reinvigoration of multilateralism, including the institutions that sustain it like the United Nations.
The dissertation focuses on governance of the UN development system, a group of 43 entities that receive
contributions for operational activities for development that collectively accounted for about 75 per cent of all
the work of the Organization in 2021. More specifically, the dissertation examines whether the design of
governing bodies in the UN development system is correlated with their performance and, if so, which
institutional rules may be particularly important in this regard.
There has been limited research on the interlinkages of design and performance of governing bodies of
international organizations like those that are part of the UN development system, and the dissertation aims to
contribute to addressing this lacunae. A mixed method approach is applied to the research process by relying
on a combination of literature review, new data collection and UN management information systems.
Since 1969, Member States, the Secretary-General and other stakeholders have regularly commissioned expert
reports and studies on reform of the UN development system. The dissertation shows that the governance related recommendations that are common to this large number of expert reports and studies and advocating
for consolidation of governance structures, more precise rules stipulating representation and participation in
governing bodies, and enhanced working methods of governing bodies, have strong support from both
academic theory and empirical evidence.
The liberalization of funding rules and practices since the 1990s, resulting in an overwhelming share of
voluntary, strictly earmarked contributions for operational activities of the UN system, has been a major causal
driver of the many governance challenges facing the Organization. While the liberalization of funding rules and
practices has led to high growth in the volume of contributions, it has also fundamentally weakened the ability
of governing bodies to perform their mandated role and functions such as providing strategic guidance and
vision, ensuring policy implementation, monitoring organizational performance and having an effective
overview of the work of both entities and the UN development system as a whole. The volume, quality,
substantive focus and destination of operational activities of the UN system are now primarily determined by
the donors individually, not Member States collectively at the level of governing bodies. As a result, most
governing bodies in the UN development system no longer retain the authority to set programme priorities,
distribute funds, create new programmes, and provide oversight and accountability of programme delivery at
the country and global level. Another corollary of the liberalization of funding rules and practices has been
increased fragmentation, overlaps and duplication of activities, as UN entities have a strong incentive to
continuously expand their mandates and functions as a strategy to reduce resource uncertainty. This has led to
rapid growth in non-core functions, i.e., those activities not directly related to the core purposes and central
mandates of UN entities.
The design of most governing bodies in the UN development system has been underpinned by the principle of
equitable geographical representation. The application of this principle, however, doesn´t enable all Member
States to contribute equitably to intergovernmental decision-making. A review of the composition of governing
bodies in the UN development system reveals that a sizeable number of Member States do not participate in
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the work of any governing body; the least-developed countries are significantly under-represented in
governing bodies; and high-income countries are much more likely to participate in the governance of UN
entities. In addition, the top programme and donor countries, which bear almost all the cost of
intergovernmental decision-making on operational activities, account for only a small share of the seats on
governing bodies in the UN development system.
The ability of central governing bodies like the General Assembly and ECOSOC to provide effective guidance,
coordination and oversight of the UN development system, including the implementation of system-wide
mandates, is limited, as their resolutions are not automatically implemented by entity-specific governing
bodies. The non-hierarchical character of inter-agency mechanisms like the United Nations Sustainable
Development Group, relying on voluntary participation and decision-making by consensus and not formally
accountable, through the Secretary-General, to central governing bodies, has also provided little incentives for
UN entities to capitalize on opportunities for synergy in programming and operations in the delivery of
operational activities. Member States have been reluctant to make inter-agency mechanisms like the UN
Sustainable Development Group formally accountable, through the Secretary-General, to central governing
bodies such as ECOSOC for the implementation of system-wide mandates.
The performance of governing bodies in the UN development system, when measured as their engagement and
ownership of the strategic planning process, varies significantly. Of the fourteen governing bodies subject to a
performance assessment, those of ICAO, IMO, WHO and FAO stood out in terms of their engagement and
ownership of the strategic planning process. In these four entities, the strategic planning process is led and
owned by the respective governing body (principal) rather than the organizational leadership (agent). Other
governing bodies play a less influential role in this process vis-à-vis the organizational leadership. Seven
institutional rules appear to be particularly important in explaining the strong ownership and engagement of
governing bodies of the strategic planning process, namely: (a) form of funding, (b) participation by technical
experts, (c) establishment of technical subsidiary bodies, (d) a technical decision-making process, (e) decisions
adopted by majority voting, (f) technically-oriented decisions and (g) criteria-based composition.
The findings of the research and analysis conducted in the dissertation show that many governing bodies in the
UN development system are not able to perform their mandated role and functions; representation in
governing bodies is often not equitable, transparent and effective; and central governing bodies like the General
Assembly and the Economic and Social Council are not equipped to ensure that UN entities operate as a
coherent system. Looking ahead, it may be particularly important for Member States to consider establishing a
unified governance arrangement for the UN development system; adopting equitable, transparent and effective
rules for the composition of governing bodies; ensuring the participation of experts in governance processes;
and strengthening the working methods of governing bodies, including the efficiency of meetings and
documentation and the quality of secretariat support.
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