European University Institute Library

Token forces, how tiny troop deployments became ubiquitous in UN peacekeeping, Katharina P. Coleman, Xiaojun Li

Label
Token forces, how tiny troop deployments became ubiquitous in UN peacekeeping, Katharina P. Coleman, Xiaojun Li
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Token forces
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1350843518
Responsibility statement
Katharina P. Coleman, Xiaojun Li
Series statement
Cambridge elements. Elements in international relations,, 2515-706XCambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
how tiny troop deployments became ubiquitous in UN peacekeeping
Summary
Token forces - tiny national troop contributions in much larger coalitions - have become ubiquitous in UN peacekeeping. This Element examines how and why this contribution type has become the most common form of participation in UN peace operations despite its limited relevance for missions' operational success. It conceptualizes token forces as a path-dependent unintended consequence of the norm of multilateralism in international uses of military force. The norm extends states' participation options by giving coalition builders an incentive to accept token forces; UN-specific types of token forces emerged as states learned about this option and secretariat officials adapted to state demand for it. The Element documents the growing incidence of token forces in UN peacekeeping, identifies the factors disposing states to contribute token forces, and discusses how UN officials channel token participation. The Element contributes to the literatures on UN peacekeeping, military coalitions, and the impacts of norms in international organizations.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
The Significance of Token Forces -- The Ubiquity of Token Forces in UN Peace Operations -- The Diffusion of Token Participation among UN Troop Contributors -- Token Forces from the UN's Perspective
Content
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