Title: Governing the European Union: policy choices and governance dilemmas
Abstract: This book seeks to understand how governors in the EU have responded to the threat of climate change. In this chapter, we first set out and explore the typical policy choices that have to be made when governors confront a major societal problem such as climate change. We then examine the EU and identify the formal and informal features of its governance system. Our argument here is that these features shed light on how the EU has made policy choices and confronted their associated governance dilemmas in the past. In order to understand how the handling of the dilemmas might be related to these features, we then turn to different theories of the EU. Although there is an abundance of EU theories, a basic distinction can be made between those that are state-centred and those that are more process-centred. State-centred theories emphasise the importance of agency: the deliberate attempts made by states to steer the EU in their preferred direction. By contrast, more process-centred theories focus on the path-dependent nature of decision making, in which each choice sets the direction for (and constrains) future choices. In the concluding section we draw together the main threads of our argument and look forward to the next chapter, which begins to describe how climate policy has evolved in the EU.
Publication Year: 2010
Publication Date: 2010-04-29
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 6
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