Informal Governance in the European UnionThomas Christiansen, Simona Piattoni Edward Elgar Publishing, 1 janv. 2003 - 273 pages How are the deals and decisions of the EU made - in the meeting rooms and at the conference tables, or by informal networks in the back corridors of power? |
À l'intérieur du livre
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Page vii
... Economic Research on the Global Environment ( CSERGE ) in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia , UK . Andreas Follesdal is Professor of Philosophy at ARENA - a Norwegian Research Council programme on ...
... Economic Research on the Global Environment ( CSERGE ) in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia , UK . Andreas Follesdal is Professor of Philosophy at ARENA - a Norwegian Research Council programme on ...
Page ix
... Economic and Financial Affairs ECJ European Court of Justice ECPR European Consortium for Political Research EEC European Economic Community EEIG European Economic Interest Groups EFC European Farmers ' Coordination EMBO European ...
... Economic and Financial Affairs ECJ European Court of Justice ECPR European Consortium for Political Research EEC European Economic Community EEIG European Economic Interest Groups EFC European Farmers ' Coordination EMBO European ...
Page x
... Economic Cooperation and Development Organisation de la Lutte Anti - Fraude open method of coordination Poland and Hungary Aid for the Reconstruction of Economies research and development Regulatory Assistance Management Group Royal ...
... Economic Cooperation and Development Organisation de la Lutte Anti - Fraude open method of coordination Poland and Hungary Aid for the Reconstruction of Economies research and development Regulatory Assistance Management Group Royal ...
Page 3
... Economic Interest Groups ' ( EEIG ) . The idea was that by registering the groups who required access to the Commission , equal status could be bestowed upon them , and thus a semblance of equality of opportunity be achieved . At the ...
... Economic Interest Groups ' ( EEIG ) . The idea was that by registering the groups who required access to the Commission , equal status could be bestowed upon them , and thus a semblance of equality of opportunity be achieved . At the ...
Page 4
... economic rationale . Yet , European integration has done little to extinguish national identity , and nationality provides in fact a fertile base for informal networks in Brussels . Not all actors may feel compelled to cooperate within ...
... economic rationale . Yet , European integration has done little to extinguish national identity , and nationality provides in fact a fertile base for informal networks in Brussels . Not all actors may feel compelled to cooperate within ...
Table des matières
1 | |
improving EU democracy? | 22 |
an exploratory study of elites power and identity | 36 |
4 Common Market institutions fraud and informal networks | 57 |
gender and informal governance | 76 |
the case of biodiversity protection | 94 |
informal governance in the EU | 114 |
8 Informal governance and biotechnology | 129 |
9 Formal and informal governance in Single Market regulation | 150 |
10 Informal governance in the Common Agricultural Policy | 173 |
11 Informality as an asset? The case of EMU | 189 |
12 Governing by informal networks? Nuclear interest groups and the eastern enlargement of the EU | 207 |
13 Backing into the future? Informality and the proliferation of governance modes and policy participants in the EU | 226 |
Bibliography | 237 |
Index | 263 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Informal Governance in the European Union Thomas Christiansen,Simona Piattoni Affichage d'extraits - 2003 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
actors agenda agricultural argue biodiversity policy biotechnology Birds Directive Brussels chapter coalition Commission officials Commission's Committee Community competence competition concerns context cooperation coordination COPA corporatism corruption Council decisions democratic DG Environment DG Research domain economic electricity elites environmental groups established EU-level EU's European Commission European institutions European integration European level European Parliament European Union example expertise farm formal framework fraud French gender German Habitats Directive implementation important influence informal governance informal networks institutionalized interaction interest groups Interview involved issue legitimacy mainstreaming MEPs Ministers negotiations NGOs normative NRC Handelsblad nuclear safety operators organizations outcomes participation patron-client policy area policy networks policy process policy-making political culture practices pressure procedures programmes question regard regulation regulatory networks relations relationships representatives role RSPB rules sector social strategy structures supranational Telecom Eireann tion transnational White Paper
Fréquemment cités
Page 188 - The Commission shall conduct these negotiations in consultation with a special committee appointed by the Council to assist the Commission in this task and within the framework of such directives as the Council may issue to it.
Page 148 - The application of scientific and engineering principles to the processing of materials by biological agents to provide goods and services.
Page 211 - In Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), per capita income fell by 2.4 percent per annum in the decade beginning in 1990 (UNDP 2002). In the Russian Federation, workers' real wages had fallen to 70 percent of 1991 levels.
Page 239 - Gender Mainstreaming in the European Commission: Explaining the Roller Coaster of Progress and Regression.
Page ix - EEA European Economic Area EEC European Economic Community EFTA European Free Trade Association EIB European Investment Bank...
Page 241 - Directive 90/220/EEC of 23 April 1990 on the deliberate release into the environment of genetically modified organisms (OJ 1990 L 117, p.
Page 99 - NGOs such as Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and the World Wide Fund for Nature...
Page 171 - In this view, policy networks are best understood as 'webs of relatively stable and ongoing relationships which mobilize and pool dispersed resources so that collective (or parallel) action can be orchestrated toward the solution of a common policy