The administrative anatomy of failure: The League of Nations Disarmament Section, 1919-1925
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The administrative anatomy of failure : The League of Nations Disarmament Section, 1919-1925. / Ikonomou, Haakon Andreas.
In: Contemporary European History, Vol. 30, No. 3, 08.2021, p. 321-334.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - The administrative anatomy of failure
T2 - The League of Nations Disarmament Section, 1919-1925
AU - Ikonomou, Haakon Andreas
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - This article investigates the creation and workings of the Disarmament Section of the League of Nations Secretariat. It shows that the Disarmament Section was an outlier of the Secretariat: supressed by the Great Powers, it had less autonomy than other parts of the administration, which from an early stage limited its bureaucratic practice to the production of information. This bureaucratic production created unreliable factual foundations for negotiations and unrealistic public expectations. Thus, the article argues that the troubled birth and administrative strangling of the Disarmament Section of the Secretariat should play a significant role in our understanding of the broader collapse of general disarmament. By making this argument, the article breaks new ground by introducing failure as an analytical category to understand the role and practices of international public administrations.
AB - This article investigates the creation and workings of the Disarmament Section of the League of Nations Secretariat. It shows that the Disarmament Section was an outlier of the Secretariat: supressed by the Great Powers, it had less autonomy than other parts of the administration, which from an early stage limited its bureaucratic practice to the production of information. This bureaucratic production created unreliable factual foundations for negotiations and unrealistic public expectations. Thus, the article argues that the troubled birth and administrative strangling of the Disarmament Section of the Secretariat should play a significant role in our understanding of the broader collapse of general disarmament. By making this argument, the article breaks new ground by introducing failure as an analytical category to understand the role and practices of international public administrations.
U2 - 10.1017/S0960777320000624
DO - 10.1017/S0960777320000624
M3 - Journal article
VL - 30
SP - 321
EP - 334
JO - Contemporary European History
JF - Contemporary European History
SN - 0960-7773
IS - 3
ER -
ID: 239637570