Carolin Anthes investigates how and why the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) struggles with systematically integrating a right to food approach in its operations. She analyzes multi-dimensional institutional roadblocks that prevent human rights from being fully mainstreamed. These barriers are shaped by a powerful state of fragmentation and disconnection: a silo culture. The book also offers valuable insights which go beyond the FAO and suggests a fairly unconventional avenue for systemic organizational change in (international) public administrations.
Contents
- Opening up and zooming in: The case of the FAO
- Methodological toolbox: Grounded theory, multi-sited ethnography, and discourse analysis
- Institutional roadblocks to mainstreaming the right to food in the FAO
- Nesting the analytical results within relevant academic debates
- Towards awareness-based systemic change in IOs
Target Groups
- Teachers and students of international relations, international organization, public administration, human rights, organizational sociology, management and leadership studies
- Practitioners in international cooperation, especially the United Nations, public administrations, and human rights and development NGOs
The Author
Dr. Carolin Anthes is an associate fellow at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt. She previously served as a consultant in the FAO Right to Food Team in Rome and also advised the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).
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