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Institutional Innovation in the EU: The Presidency of the European Council
Carlos Closa
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The agenda-shaping powers of the EU Council Presidency
Journal of European Public Policy, 2003Existing literature is overwhelmingly sceptical about the capacity of the Council Presidency to shape the EU agenda. The Presidency's ability to promote private concerns is considered highly limited and, typically, the Presidency is depicted as a "responsabilite sans pouvior'. This article challenges the conventional wisdom on theoretical and empirical
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The rotating Presidency of the Council of the EU – Still an agenda-setter?
European Union Politics, 2020What role does the rotating Council Presidency maintain a decade after Lisbon? This article argues that, regardless of institutional changes, the rotating Presidency still shapes the Council agenda to a large extent. Based on an original hand-coded dataset of rotating Presidency programmes between 1997 and 2017, I show that some policies are ‘stickier’
Auste Vaznonytė
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The Polish EU Council Presidency in 2011: Master or Servant?
Journal of European Integration, 2015The point of departure of this article is limited systematic research on the rotating EU Council Presidency after the Lisbon Treaty. In order to assess rotating presidencies the paper proposes a three-tier approach which includes a functional, a behavioural and a contingency dimension.
Ireneusz Pawel Karolewski, Monika Süß
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EU Council Presidency as Agenda Shaper: The Case of the Czech EU Presidency
2014Based on an analysis of several EU Presidencies, Swe dish political scientist Jonas Tallberg created a model that identifies ways in wh ich EU Presidency countries shape the EU agenda. In this model, Tallberg concep tualises the process of agenda shaping in a broader way and particularly focuses o n structuring issues that are already a part of the EU ...
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UKRAINIAN MEDIA ON HUNGARY'S PRESIDENCY OF THE EU COUNCIL
Public Administration and Law ReviewThis article examines the reaction and coverage by Ukrainian media of Hungary's presidency of the Council of the European Union. The aim of the article is to analyze and systematize the approaches of Ukrainian media to covering Hungary's presidency of the EU Council, assess their impact on shaping public opinion in Ukraine on this issue, and explore ...
Dmytro Tkach, Maria Burmaka
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