Results 71 to 80 of about 1,209 (229)
Abstract The Anti‐Coercion Instrument (ACI), the most powerful tool in the EU's geoeconomic arsenal, has its origins in the first Trump US presidency and has recently been brandished again as a potential response to Trump's coercive tariffs. Its centrality to the EU's ‘geoeconomic turn’ and the twists and turns of its legislative history have been ...
Jaša Veselinovič
wiley +1 more source
The governance of the European Union a new institutionalist approach
The hypothesis: The main aim of this paper is to analyse three central issues of the governance of the EU. It seeks to locate the EU institutions in a comparative politics context, which allows us to go beyond the detailed configurative studies of the ...
Viktorija Braziunaite
doaj +1 more source
Abstract Literature on policy debates often analyses cases involving either a single or two policy fields, which typically result in stable equilibria, manifesting either as outright rejection of policy proposals, successful institutional change or the entrenchment of divisions into a deadlock.
Laure Gosselin +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Delving into social entrepreneurship in universities: is it legitimate yet?
Universities have recently been pressurized to go beyond their economic conceptualization of third-mission activities and contribute to solving grand societal challenges in the regions in which they are located. Social entrepreneurship has emerged as one
Ridvan Cinar
doaj +1 more source
The Family Grant Program: new institutionalism in Brazilian social policy
The Family Grant Program was established by the Brazilian federal government in October 2003 to fight poverty and hunger and promote innovations in government social intervention.
Mônica de Castro Maia Senna +4 more
doaj +1 more source
The Adaptive Stability of the European Union's Long‐Term Budget
Abstract This article examines the adaptive stability of the European Union's long‐term budget from the Delors I package of 1988–1992 to the Multiannual Financial Framework of 2014–2020, focusing on the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and Cohesion Policy.
David Moloney, Mads Dagnis Jensen
wiley +1 more source
The ‘Geopolitical Commission’: 40 Years in the Making?
Abstract In 2019, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen promised MEPs she would deliver a ‘Geopolitical Commission’ during the five years of her term in office, unbeknown that the COVID‐19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine were around the corner.
Robert Kissack
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Global policy‐making is often described as taking place in a fragmented and complex institutional landscape. In this article, we revisit the verdict of fragmentation through the lens of discourse network analysis, seeking to understand the extent to which global policy debates can be characterised as fragmented.
Maria Weickardt Soares +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Words Matter in Public Policy: Reflections on the Special Issue
Abstract Words matter in public policy and politics. But how do we understand the influence of words exactly? Is language a vehicle to express thoughts and ideas, delivering ideas to audiences akin to a conveyor belt? Or does language form ideas in the first place, and is language constitutive of realities, shaping the thoughts of both those who ...
Maarten A. Hajer
wiley +1 more source
An Action Plan for the Mediterranean: a Case of EU Policy Transfer to the Mediterranean Basin
Although for millennia the Mediterranean has facilitated the exchange of goods and people, in recent decades, it has been treated as a border between continents, nations and supranational institutions, with the European Union on one side and MENA region ...
Roberto Rocco, Carola Hein, Remon Rooij
doaj +1 more source

