On International Organisations and Responsible Leadership: A Snake Eating its Own Tail (Opinion)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2021
Summary
ABSTRACT
This opinion piece summarises my observations of the internal functioning of multilateral organisations, made throughout decades of my professional experience and supported by recent research – in the rare instances where such research is available. This contribution is written to highlight the deficiencies that I consider critical for the survival of international organisations, and as an urgent call for change. To frame the arguments, elements of the responsible leadership concept are used: ethical and people-centred leadership, a true focus on effectiveness and long-term impact, meaningful engagement of civil society and genuine cooperation within and between international organisations. Issues related to internal justice systems, accountability for public resources, democracy and relevance of existing internal decision-making structures and effectiveness of internal communication systems – each tremendously important in its own right – are not covered for reasons of space. Each section describes what I see as key problems and their underlying reasons, and concludes with a set of proposals for how international organisations could fix these problems internally. In the last section, I reflect on the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and how responsible leadership failures and operational deficiencies that were a longknown yet often unspoken reality became amplified during the crisis.
DISCLAIMER
In this opinion piece, I list several issues I have observed in my decades of professional experience working for the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and interacting with other international organisations (IOs), mostly the Council of Europe (CoE) and various United Nations (UN) agencies. Others have also noted the problems I describe, and I make reference to their findings. However, research about the internal functioning of international organisations is still scarce.
The organisations vary in how they are structured, how they work and how they understand and apply responsible leadership. In all IOs, there are many good examples of responsible leadership that drive operations in a highly ethical, people-centred way, with decisions and actions focused on a well defined, long-term impact. I have seen those examples and the difference they can make for the staff working in these organisations and for the communities the organisations serve. However, in most cases, such responsible leadership is driven by a few exceptional individuals rather than being a norm of how international organisations function. That is why I see a need for systemic change.
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- Information
- European Yearbook on Human Rights 2020 , pp. 17 - 40Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2020