Author (Person) | Eckert, Sandra |
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Series Title | Journal of Contemporary European Research |
Series Details | Vol.12, No.1 (2016) |
Publication Date | January 2016 |
ISSN | 1815-347X |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
The JCER is an open-access journal published by the University Association for Contemporary European Studies (UACES) in association with the UACES Student Forum. The JCER invites submissions from scholars who are experts in any subject area delivering analysis that relates to Europe. This includes, but is not limited to, Politics/International Relations, Area Studies, European Integration, Economics, Law, History, Culture and Learning & Teaching. The journal publishes the work of established academics alongside that of PhD students and early career researchers.Abstract: European energy policy dates back to the founding days of integration, yet the emergence of supranational governance is a recent development. The article examines the extent to which European policymakers have succeeded in building up governance capacity, and what the facilitating and impeding factors were that have shaped the governance mix. The conceptual framework differentiates between orders of governance in the multilevel context, and between policy modes involving hierarchical and non-hierarchical settings and varying actor constellations. The article finds that governance capacity has emerged where second order governance (institutional and procedural rules) is concerned, while first order governance (the concrete policy process) remains the remit of national and private actors. This becomes even more obvious once the interaction between policy modes is taken into account: governance networks enhance governance capacity in the area of competition policy and agency governance; self-regulation by industry constitutes a fall-back option in case of insufficient governance capacity on cross-border issues; soft governance helps to bridge multiple policy areas and levels of governance. The article concludes that second order governance may prove effective where it combines with hierarchy but that it may fail to overcome both trade-offs between contradicting goals and resistance at lower levels. This article forms part of a special issue Sixty-Five Years of European Governance. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/issue/view/43 |
Subject Categories | Energy |
Countries / Regions | Europe |