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Jörgens, H., Saerbeck, B. & Well, M. (2018). Environmental Treaty Secretariats as Attention-Seeking Bureaucracies: Cornerstones of an Analytical Framework. 59th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association: “Power of Rules and Rule of Power”.
H. D. Jorgens et al., "Environmental Treaty Secretariats as Attention-Seeking Bureaucracies: Cornerstones of an Analytical Framework", in 59th Annu. Conv. of the Int. Studies Association: “Power of Rules and Rule of Power”, San Francisco, 2018
@misc{jorgens2018_1732207890596, author = "Jörgens, H. and Saerbeck, B. and Well, M.", title = "Environmental Treaty Secretariats as Attention-Seeking Bureaucracies: Cornerstones of an Analytical Framework", year = "2018", howpublished = "Digital", url = "https://www.isanet.org/Conferences/San-Francisco-2018/Information" }
TY - CPAPER TI - Environmental Treaty Secretariats as Attention-Seeking Bureaucracies: Cornerstones of an Analytical Framework T2 - 59th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association: “Power of Rules and Rule of Power” AU - Jörgens, H. AU - Saerbeck, B. AU - Well, M. PY - 2018 CY - San Francisco UR - https://www.isanet.org/Conferences/San-Francisco-2018/Information AB - International treaty secretariats are increasingly seen as influential actors in global environmental policymaking. Yet, we still lack understanding of how and under which conditions they exert influence on multilateral environmental negotiations. So far, most scholars adopt a principal-agent perspective, arguing that bureaucracies hold preferences that deviate from those of their principals, thereby creating problems of oversight and control. According to this view, bureaucracies become influential because they operate "behind the scenes". We question this assumption by conceptualizing international treaty secretariats as attention-seeking bureaucracies. Rather than acting below the radar of their principals and the public in general, we expect treaty secretariats to actively seek the attention of the parties to multilateral environmental negotiations. We expect secretariats: 1) to be most influential at the stages of problem definition and agenda-setting. 2) Due to their limited powers, they need the attention of the negotiating parties in order to become influential. 3) We therefore expect them to advocate more or less openly for their policy positions. 4) They do so either directly by seeking the attention of negotiators or indirectly by building up support outside the negotiation arena. In both cases, treaty secretariats act as attention-seeking policy advocates rather than "undercover agents". ER -