The behavioural logics of international public servants: the case of African Union Commission staff

In this co-authored article in Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Jarle Trondal examines the behavioural logics of international civil servants embedded in small secretariats, providing the first ever comprehensive survey of AUC staff.

Image may contain: journal cover

Abstract

Although international organisations (IOs) are created by governments, their international public administrations (IPAs) have succeeded in ring-fencing their resources, and policymaking from direct intervention by member states. Research shows that international civil servants are best able to protect their autonomy when embedded in large and well-resourced IPAs. Staff in large IOs use their huge size, bureaucratic complexities, and different behavioural logics to protect their autonomy and thereby leave a ‘bureaucratic footprint’ in international affairs. Whereas the behavioural logics of large IPAs, mostly headquartered in the Global North, are reasonably well-documented, not much has been written on behavioural logics of international civil servants embedded in small secretariats. We seek to address the gap using the African Union Commission (AUC) staff. Drawing insights from organisational theory and mixed research methods, including the first ever comprehensive survey of AUC staff, the study finds that the AUC staff primarily evoke a departmental behavioural logic. In the absence of departmental logics, the preference of AUC staff is to take on supranational, transnational, and lastly intergovernmental persona. The reluctance of AUC staff to evoke intergovernmental logic is surprising given that the AUC is embedded in an intergovernmental governance architecture.

Full info

Jarle Trondal, Thomas Kwasi Tieku, Stefan Gänzle
 
The behavioural logics of international public servants: the case of African Union Commission staff
 
Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 2024
 
 
Published June 17, 2024 11:01 AM - Last modified June 17, 2024 11:01 AM