Magioni Junior, Darli
  
(2021)
Before It's Too Late: INGOs' Handling of Conflict Risk in South Sudan, [Dissertation thesis], Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna. 
 Dottorato di ricerca in 
Scienze politiche e sociali, 33 Ciclo. DOI 10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9965.
  
 
  
  
        
        
        
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
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      Abstract
      What do international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) do before and during the escalation of conflicts? The academic literature primarily focuses on these organisations' behaviour during an evident crisis rather
than on how they anticipate the escalation of conflicts, assess the situation in which they find themselves, and decide on strategies to cope with the possibility of upcoming  violence. Such lopsided focus persists despite calls for INGOs to become more proactive in managing their programmes and their staff members' safety. Mindful of this imbalance, the present study provides a causal explanation of how decision-makers in INGOs anticipate and react to the risk of low-level  violence escalating into full-blown conflicts.
This thesis aims to explain these actors' behaviour by presenting it as a two�step process involving how INGOs conduct risk assessments and how they turn these assessments into decisions. The study performs a structured, focused 
comparison of seven INGOs operating in South Sudan before the so-called Juba Clashes of 7 July 2016. Based on an analytical framework of INGO decision�making stemming from political risk analysis, organisational decision-making theory and conflict studies literature, the study reconstructs decision-making via process-tracing combined with mixed methods of data collection.
     
    
      Abstract
      What do international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) do before and during the escalation of conflicts? The academic literature primarily focuses on these organisations' behaviour during an evident crisis rather
than on how they anticipate the escalation of conflicts, assess the situation in which they find themselves, and decide on strategies to cope with the possibility of upcoming  violence. Such lopsided focus persists despite calls for INGOs to become more proactive in managing their programmes and their staff members' safety. Mindful of this imbalance, the present study provides a causal explanation of how decision-makers in INGOs anticipate and react to the risk of low-level  violence escalating into full-blown conflicts.
This thesis aims to explain these actors' behaviour by presenting it as a two�step process involving how INGOs conduct risk assessments and how they turn these assessments into decisions. The study performs a structured, focused 
comparison of seven INGOs operating in South Sudan before the so-called Juba Clashes of 7 July 2016. Based on an analytical framework of INGO decision�making stemming from political risk analysis, organisational decision-making theory and conflict studies literature, the study reconstructs decision-making via process-tracing combined with mixed methods of data collection.
     
  
  
    
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di dottorato
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore
          Magioni Junior, Darli
          
        
      
        
          Supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
          Co-supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
          Dottorato di ricerca
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ciclo
          33
          
        
      
        
          Coordinatore
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore disciplinare
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore concorsuale
          
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          INGOs, conflict, political risk, South Sudan, humanitarianism, crisis decision-making
          
        
      
        
          URN:NBN
          
          
        
      
        
          DOI
          10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9965
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione
          5 Novembre 2021
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
    Altri metadati
    
      Tipologia del documento
      Tesi di dottorato
      
      
      
      
        
      
        
          Autore
          Magioni Junior, Darli
          
        
      
        
          Supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
          Co-supervisore
          
          
        
      
        
          Dottorato di ricerca
          
          
        
      
        
      
        
          Ciclo
          33
          
        
      
        
          Coordinatore
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore disciplinare
          
          
        
      
        
          Settore concorsuale
          
          
        
      
        
          Parole chiave
          INGOs, conflict, political risk, South Sudan, humanitarianism, crisis decision-making
          
        
      
        
          URN:NBN
          
          
        
      
        
          DOI
          10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/9965
          
        
      
        
          Data di discussione
          5 Novembre 2021
          
        
      
      URI
      
      
     
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
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