2019
DOI: 10.1177/1369148118819695
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Variation in delegation size in multilateral diplomacy

Abstract: Why do some countries send big delegations to multilateral negotiations, whereas others send very small ones? This article looks at both the causes of variation in state delegations to multilateral conferences but also at the consequences of such variation at both micro-and macrolevel. It tests the arguments derived from liberal theory of international regimes, using the case of the NPT Review Process. The results suggest that economic and security interests drive states' participation in the multilateral sett… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(66 reference statements)
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“…Their findings show a generally growing trend in the total number of delegates. Moreover, the studies investigate the cross‐country variation in the delegation size, highlighting the impact of issue‐specific motivations (Kaya & Schofield, 2020; Onderco, 2019). However, the UN remains relatively understudied due to its general‐purpose nature (Lenz et al, 2014).…”
Section: Delegation Size Mattersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Their findings show a generally growing trend in the total number of delegates. Moreover, the studies investigate the cross‐country variation in the delegation size, highlighting the impact of issue‐specific motivations (Kaya & Schofield, 2020; Onderco, 2019). However, the UN remains relatively understudied due to its general‐purpose nature (Lenz et al, 2014).…”
Section: Delegation Size Mattersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Again, countries that control significant financial capacities are more active in negotiations (Panke, 2017a), place more nationals in the international bureaucracies (Novosad & Werker, 2019; Parizek, 2017; Parizek & Stephen, 2021), and provide financial aid to other member states in exchange for their support in the decision‐making (Dreher et al, 2008). Wealthier states also delegate more national representatives to multilateral meetings than countries with fewer financial capacities (Kaya & Schofield, 2020; Onderco, 2019; Vlcek, 2021). Therefore, we may expect that countries with more financial capacities delegate more national representatives to the UNGA sessions than countries with fewer financial resources (H1b).…”
Section: What Accounts For the Variation In The Size Of The National ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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