Bargaining in the UN Security Council

Setting the Global Agenda

Susan Allen author Amy Yuen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:14th Feb '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Bargaining in the UN Security Council cover

Even after seventy-five years, the UN Security Council meets nearly every day. They respond to a range of threats to international peace and security, but not all threats. Why does the Security Council take up some issues for discussion and not others? What factors shape the Council's actions, if they take any action at all? Adapting insights from legislative bargaining, this book demonstrates that the agenda-setting powers granted in the institutional rules offer less powerful Council members the opportunity to influence the content of a resolution without jeopardizing its passage. The Council also decides when to conduct public or private diplomacy. The analysis shows how external factors like international and domestic public reactions motivate grandstanding behaviors and shape resolutions. New quantitative data on meetings and outside options provide support for these claims. The book also explores the dynamics of the formal analysis in three cases: North Korean nuclear proliferation, the negotiations leading up to NATO bombing in Serbia over Kosovo, and the elected member-led process to codify the principles of the Responsibility to Protect doctrine. The book argues that while the powerful veto members do have great influence over the Council, the rules of the most consequential security institution influence its policy outcomes, just as they do in any other international institution.

Although the book is excellent on the internal matters of the security council * D. P. Forsythe, CHOICE *
Susan Allen and Amy Yuen's Bargaining in the UN Security Council: Setting the Global Agenda offers a look behind the curtain into the core of this decision-making process...The book creates the framework for analyzing UNSC operations and sets the stage for future work exploring its activities. Its use of empirical data and analysis of the bargaining process makes it a useful resource for scholars, policymakers, and students interested in the workings of the Security Council. * Molly M. Melin, Loyola University Chicago, International Peacekeeping *

  • Winner of Winner, ACUNS Book Award.

ISBN: 9780192849755

Dimensions: 242mm x 165mm x 13mm

Weight: 494g

218 pages