This article examines how the conflicts latent in EU regulation are managed. First, it looks at how policy issues are framed as positive-sum games, party-political arenas avoided and consensual problem-solving methods of policy-making promoted. Then it addresses the puzzle of the robustness of regulatory conflict management. If challenged in its regulatory endeavour, the EU tends to respond with more regulation. Finally, the article outlines the limitations of regulatory conflict management which are to be found less in outright deadlock than in attenuation of processes, loss of focus, information overload and a tendency to solve small problems while neglecting large ones
This article argues that in situations of policy conflict, policymaking institutions that act as de ...
Offers a summary of the EU’s rule of law debate over the last decade.Analyses a variety of challenge...
The purpose of this study is to determine to what extent the European Union (EU) functions as a mark...
This article examines how the conflicts latent in EU regulation are managed. First, it looks at how ...
In this conceptual article we explore mechanisms of conflict management in European Union (EU) regul...
This paper conceptualises European governance as a continuous series of collective action games amon...
Regulatory reforms labelled ‘Better Regulation’ are a prominent item on the political agendas of mos...
The flurry of recent activity in the EU over “Better Regulation” has important constitutional implic...
Politics is usually thought of as taking place given a set of constitutional constraints. The consti...
The article determines which conflict resolution mechanisms are constructive and which are destructi...
European composite administration has a complex pluralistic structure based on the interaction betwe...
The European Union (EU) faces a problem of uneven implementation of its rules by national authoritie...
Despite ample evidence of breaches of the rule of law by governments in Hungary and Poland, and wide...
This article explains why regulation has come to the fore as an instrument in contemporary policy-ma...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Party Politics and Democr...
This article argues that in situations of policy conflict, policymaking institutions that act as de ...
Offers a summary of the EU’s rule of law debate over the last decade.Analyses a variety of challenge...
The purpose of this study is to determine to what extent the European Union (EU) functions as a mark...
This article examines how the conflicts latent in EU regulation are managed. First, it looks at how ...
In this conceptual article we explore mechanisms of conflict management in European Union (EU) regul...
This paper conceptualises European governance as a continuous series of collective action games amon...
Regulatory reforms labelled ‘Better Regulation’ are a prominent item on the political agendas of mos...
The flurry of recent activity in the EU over “Better Regulation” has important constitutional implic...
Politics is usually thought of as taking place given a set of constitutional constraints. The consti...
The article determines which conflict resolution mechanisms are constructive and which are destructi...
European composite administration has a complex pluralistic structure based on the interaction betwe...
The European Union (EU) faces a problem of uneven implementation of its rules by national authoritie...
Despite ample evidence of breaches of the rule of law by governments in Hungary and Poland, and wide...
This article explains why regulation has come to the fore as an instrument in contemporary policy-ma...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Party Politics and Democr...
This article argues that in situations of policy conflict, policymaking institutions that act as de ...
Offers a summary of the EU’s rule of law debate over the last decade.Analyses a variety of challenge...
The purpose of this study is to determine to what extent the European Union (EU) functions as a mark...