Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2899260347> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2899260347 endingPage "79" @default.
- W2899260347 startingPage "62" @default.
- W2899260347 abstract "While the political nature of evaluation is widely recognized, few attempts exist to conceptualize and compare these politics. This article develops the concept of evaluation stakeholder influence potential, which builds on four political resources for influence (agenda-setting powers, staff and budgetary resources, access to evaluation results, and access to evaluators). These resources are measured for both member states and international public administrations in 24 United Nations organizations. We find that the administration—and not member states—have the largest influence potential in almost two-thirds of the international organizations. Our findings allow classifying them into three groups for which we expect differences in political contestation about evaluation use: two extreme-case groups (either member state or administrative dominance) and a group of contested middle cases. This finding of bureaucratic dominance reinforces literature on bureaucrats as powerful evaluation stakeholders in domestic settings and speaks to nascent research on bureaucratic influence in international organizations." @default.
- W2899260347 created "2018-11-09" @default.
- W2899260347 creator A5013674328 @default.
- W2899260347 creator A5028821349 @default.
- W2899260347 date "2018-11-01" @default.
- W2899260347 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W2899260347 title "The politics of evaluation in international organizations: A comparative study of stakeholder influence potential" @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1605186412 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W168611751 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1968825541 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1971265784 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1985223025 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1988164242 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1989909430 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W1993562114 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2011722019 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2023487457 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2028406427 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2043234688 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2052886736 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2053046349 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2068100859 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2070202472 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2075755217 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2077729868 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2081406052 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2084445032 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2092172205 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2114421180 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2117488372 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2127164073 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2131630559 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2138996357 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2140253067 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2151707779 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2153674322 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2159783841 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2160827206 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2315652445 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2316568114 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2324664192 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2336590566 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2338957739 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2342124995 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2342695838 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2412158413 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2471970256 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2511537790 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2516671571 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2543849023 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2610237523 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2735307218 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2750710780 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2786639955 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2790501379 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2810838146 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W2983033354 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W4235015299 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W4242579439 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W4251074927 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W4252509811 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W571470188 @default.
- W2899260347 cites W999234595 @default.
- W2899260347 doi "https://doi.org/10.1177/1356389018803967" @default.
- W2899260347 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2899260347 type Work @default.
- W2899260347 sameAs 2899260347 @default.
- W2899260347 citedByCount "16" @default.
- W2899260347 countsByYear W28992603472019 @default.
- W2899260347 countsByYear W28992603472020 @default.
- W2899260347 countsByYear W28992603472021 @default.
- W2899260347 countsByYear W28992603472022 @default.
- W2899260347 countsByYear W28992603472023 @default.
- W2899260347 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2899260347 hasAuthorship W2899260347A5013674328 @default.
- W2899260347 hasAuthorship W2899260347A5028821349 @default.
- W2899260347 hasBestOaLocation W28992603471 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C11413529 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C151913843 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C185592680 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C201305675 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C2778849394 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C3116431 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C39549134 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C48103436 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C51575053 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C55493867 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConceptScore W2899260347C104317684 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConceptScore W2899260347C11413529 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConceptScore W2899260347C138885662 @default.
- W2899260347 hasConceptScore W2899260347C151913843 @default.