UN Organs’ Strategies for Protection of Civilians: Coherent, Adaptable or Both?
Abstract
This thesis examines the coherence and adaptiveness of the UN Special Committee on
Peacekeeping Operations and the UN Security Council in the case of protection of civilians in
peacekeeping missions. Ignasi Torrent’s conceptualisation on coherence and adaptiveness,
that coherence limits adaptiveness, is used to analyse if there is a correlation between the two.
The UN wants to achieve system wide coherence in peacekeeping missions, meaning that the
UN policy is that every stakeholder within a peacekeeping mission should be on the same
page. This attempt to be coherent throughout the whole system within a mission limits the
adaptiveness of the UN. In an unpredictable setting like a conflict environment it is difficult
to know which plan is going to be a failure and which is going to be a success. Therefore,
high adaptiveness is important in order to be able to make changes to a plan when unforeseen
events occur. The question of how coherent both organs are is answered by a qualitative
content analysis over time of both organs plans on how to protect civilians and coherence is
measured by how many similarities or differences there are in both organs’ plans. The
question of how adaptive the two organs are is answered in the same way and the
adaptiveness is measured by how many changes to the plan are made. Finally the correlation
is studied. If the two organs are coherent, does that limit adaptability? Or if the two organs
are not coherent, does that lead to more adaptability?
Degree
Student essay
Collections
Date
2022-11-03Author
Sjölund, Gustav
Keywords
United Nations Security Council, Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations, coherence, adaptability, protection of civilians
Language
eng