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Losing control: a principal-agent analysis of Russia in the United Nations Security Council's decision-making towards the Libya crisis

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Russia’s behaviour in the United Nations Security Council remains poorly understood. Applying principal-agent insights, this article analyses the Russian abstention towards Resolution 1973, which authorised intervention during the 2011 Libya crisis. Introducing a triangle of delegation, it shows that preferences diverged regarding the means and aims of the intervention. The article also investigates the information asymmetries which characterised the decision-making and indicates that this affected the Russian capacity to control the North-Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which implemented Resolution 1973. It argues that Russia can only effectively control such a UN-authorised intervention by using, or threatening to use, its veto power.
Journal: East European Politics
ISSN: 2159-9165
Issue: 4
Volume: 31
Pages: 369 - 387
Publication year:2015
Accessibility:Closed