“…In fact, they strongly support recent studies on the resilience of IOs operating in other policy arenas, such as security (e.g., Schütte, 2021aSchütte, , 2022 Second, the insights generated by the dissertation contribute to the IR literature on bureaucratic politics by revealing the specific roles played by institutional leadership in IO responses to challenges. Recent decades have seen a proliferation of studies on the influence of institutional actors in global decision-and policy-making processes (Bauer and Ege, 2016;Bayerlein et al 2020;Biermann and Siebenhüner, 2009;Chorev, 2012;Eckhardt et al, 2021;Ege, 2020;Ege et al, 2022;Jinnah, 2010Johnson and Urpelainen, 2014;Knill and Bauer, 2016;Knill et al, 2019;Kreuder-Sonnen, 2019). These have strengthened the view that IOs are not mere extensions of states nor simple fora through which states engage in power politics, but are instead actors in their own right with increasing autonomy and authority Finnemore, 1999, 2004;Bauer and Ege, 2016;Hooghe et al 2017;Zürn, Tokhi, and Binder 2021).…”