The UN Security Council: legitimacy and organized hypocrisy
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32814Dato
2023-12-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Dahl-Eriksen, Tor ChristianSammendrag
The authority of the UN Security Council (UNSC), perhaps also its legitimacy, may have been brought into question by recent events. The war in Ukraine and the inferno in the Middle East challenges its
role as preserver of international peace and security, and poor or highly selective responses to mass atrocities challenges its capacity to provide protection to populations when states fail. This article focuses on
organized hypocrisy as a possible organizational answer to these challenges, drawing on the theoretical
framework developed mainly by Nils Brunsson. Organized hypocrisy treats talk, decisions, and actions
as independent elements meeting different demands from the environment with different answers. This
may help a complex political organization like the UNSC to reduce the pressure from challenges, because it allows for drawing legitimacy from several loose-coupled sources. A particular important such source is the UNSC’s role as the only arena of global scope where representatives from the most powerful
states regularly meet for discussions and possible decisions.
Forlag
Ústav politických vied SAV, v.v.i.Sitering
Dahl-Eriksen. The UN Security Council: legitimacy and organized hypocrisy. Studia Politica Slovaca. 2023Metadata
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