Behavior and change in international organizations (IOs) have been recently recognized as important yet understudied
phenomena in international relations. While a number of notable works focusing on IO authority and autonomy have
appeared recently, the debates on whether member states or bureaucrats have the upper hand in determining IO
behavior masks the complex reality in which states, IO officials, independent experts and civil society actors enter into
discussions or negotiations about courses of action which are appropriate for a given IO. In order to provide a more
nuanced account of this reality, the thesis applies the norm diffusion theory to explaining the evolution of UN
peacekeeping operations in the aftermath of the Cold War. The paper looks at policy norms prescribing missions to
afford protection to civilians under imminent threat of physical violence and develop public information campaigns
targeted at the local population. The thesis theorizes four diffusion mechanisms and five categories of scope conditions
which have a bearing on diffusion. It hypothesizes and subsequently demonstrates that each mechanism's functioning
depends on a specific constellation of the conditions from the five categories. Despite a number of difficulties
associated with the application of the norm diffusion theory to IOs, the study cases has produced interesting results
which other theories of IOs behavior and change have struggled to deliver.Behavior and change in international organizations (IOs) have been recently recognized as important yet understudied
phenomena in international relations. While a number of notable works focusing on IO authority and autonomy have
appeared recently, the debates on whether member states or bureaucrats have the upper hand in determining IO
behavior masks the complex reality in which states, IO officials, independent experts and civil society actors enter into
discussions or negotiations about courses of action which are appropriate for a given IO. In order to provide a more
nuanced account of this reality, the thesis applies the norm diffusion theory to explaining the evolution of UN
peacekeeping operations in the aftermath of the Cold War. The paper looks at policy norms prescribing missions to
afford protection to civilians under imminent threat of physical violence and develop public information campaigns
targeted at the local population. The thesis theorizes four diffusion mechanisms and five categories of scope conditions
which have a bearing on diffusion. It hypothesizes and subsequently demonstrates that each mechanism's functioning
depends on a specific constellation of the conditions from the five categories. Despite a number of difficulties
associated with the application of the norm diffusion theory to IOs, the study cases has produced interesting results
which other theories of IOs behavior and change have struggled to deliver.LUISS PhD Thesi
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