"Ten years after: (Re) assessing neo-trusteeship and UN state-building " by Michael J. Butler
 

Political Science

Ten years after: (Re) assessing neo-trusteeship and UN state-building in Timor-Leste

Document Type

Article

Abstract

A decade after achieving independence, the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (DRTL) continues to rely upon the United Nations (UN) directly and indirectly to carry out functions typically ascribed to the state. This dependency raises the specter of what scholars concerned with the breadth and extent of recent and ongoing UN operations in places such as Timor-Leste have dubbed "neo-trusteeship." This research advances an empirical accounting of, and explanation for, the emergence and persistence of neo-trusteeship in Timor-Leste. Careful scrutiny of the UN involvement in Timor-Leste betrays the origins and sources of the neo-trusteeship arrangement and suggests that neo-trusteeship is better understood as a by-product of the disjuncture between mandate overreach and organizational incapacity playing out within complex post-conflict environments rather than any intentional manifestation of "post-modern imperialism." © 2011 International Studies Association.

Publication Title

International Studies Perspectives

Publication Date

2-2012

Volume

13

Issue

1

First Page

85

Last Page

104

ISSN

1528-3577

DOI

10.1111/j.1528-3585.2011.00443.x

Keywords

Timor-Leste, neo-trusteeship, United Nations

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