EU Battlegroups: High costs, no benefits Y Reykers Contemporary Security Policy 38 (3), 457-470, 2017 | 38 | 2017 |
Ad hoc coalitions and institutional exploitation in international security: towards a typology J Karlsrud, Y Reykers Third world quarterly 41 (9), 1518-1536, 2020 | 26 | 2020 |
Process-tracing as a tool to analyse discretion Y Reykers, D Beach The principal agent model and the European Union, 255-281, 2017 | 24 | 2017 |
Parliamentary involvement, party ideology and majority-opposition bargaining: Belgian participation in multinational military operations D Fonck, T Haesebrouck, Y Reykers Contemporary security policy 40 (1), 85-100, 2019 | 22 | 2019 |
No supply without demand: explaining the absence of the EU Battlegroups in Libya, Mali and the Central African Republic Y Reykers European Security 25 (3), 346-365, 2016 | 22 | 2016 |
A permanent headquarters under construction? The Military Planning and Conduct Capability as a proximate principal Y Reykers Journal of European integration 41 (6), 783-799, 2019 | 21 | 2019 |
Voting on the use of armed force*: Challenges of data indexing, classification, and the value of a comparative agenda F Ostermann, F Böller, FJ Christiansen, F Coticchia, D Fonck, ... Research Methods in Defence Studies, 170-188, 2020 | 20 | 2020 |
Show them the flag: status ambitions and recognition in small state coalition warfare RB Pedersen, Y Reykers European security 29 (1), 16-32, 2020 | 19 | 2020 |
Parliamentarisation as a two-way process: Explaining prior parliamentary consultation for military interventions D Fonck, Y Reykers Parliamentary affairs 71 (3), 674-696, 2018 | 17 | 2018 |
Losing control: a principal-agent analysis of Russia in the United Nations Security Council's decision-making towards the Libya crisis Y Reykers, N Smeets East European Politics 31 (4), 369-387, 2015 | 17 | 2015 |
From indications to indicators: Measuring regional leadership in the UN context E Drieskens, R Van Genderen, Y Reykers Journal of Policy Modeling 36, S151-S171, 2014 | 16 | 2014 |
Multinational rapid response mechanisms: Past promises and future prospects Y Reykers, J Karlsrud Contemporary Security Policy 38 (3), 420-426, 2017 | 14 | 2017 |
Who is controlling whom? An analysis of the Belgian federal parliament’s executive oversight capacities towards the military interventions in Libya (2011) and Iraq (2014-2015) Y Reykers, D Fonck Studia diplomatica 68 (2), 91-110, 2015 | 13 | 2015 |
The EU's search for effective participation at the UN General Assembly and UN Security Council E Drieskens, L Van Dievel, Y Reykers The EU and effective multilateralism, 15-32, 2014 | 11 | 2014 |
Multinational rapid response mechanisms: From institutional proliferation to institutional exploitation J Karlsrud, Y Reykers Routledge, 2018 | 9 | 2018 |
The Principal–Agent Model and Inter-Organizational Relations E Drieskens, Y Reykers Palgrave Handbook of Inter-Organizational Relations in World Politics, 271-288, 2017 | 8 | 2017 |
Learning to Talk the Talk: Re-Appraising the External Perspective in the EU’s Foreign Policy N Smeets, J Adriaensen, Y Reykers CEU Political Science Journal 8 (3), 296-322, 2013 | 8 | 2013 |
War in Ukraine H Dijkstra, MD Cavelty, N Jenne, Y Reykers Contemporary Security Policy 43 (3), 464-465, 2022 | 7 | 2022 |
No wings attached? Civil–military relations and agent intrusion in the procurement of fighter jets Y Reykers, D Fonck Cooperation and conflict 55 (1), 66-85, 2020 | 7 | 2020 |
Hurry up and wait: EU battlegroups and a UN rapid reaction force Y Reykers Global Peace Operations Review: Annual Compilation 2016, 123-127, 2017 | 7 | 2017 |