Results 271 to 280 of about 8,123 (316)

Does public participation foster stakeholder support for policy proposals? Evidence from the European Union

open access: yesPolicy Studies Journal, EarlyView.
Abstract We examine whether and how public participation in policymaking contributes towards fostering stakeholder support for policy proposals formulated in the bureaucratic arena. We explain how key markers of procedural fairness describing both the participation process and policymakers' presentations of it during the decision justification stage co‐
Adriana Bunea, Idunn Nørbech
wiley   +1 more source

How Different Patterns of Policy Attention Drive Policy Diffusion: Evidence From China's River Chief System

open access: yesPolicy Studies Journal, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Despite extensive research on policy diffusion, the ways in which policy attention influences this process remain underexplored. This study addressed this gap by distinguishing between three types of policy attention—political speeches, policy issuance and field visits—and investigating their differential impacts when delivered by central and ...
Xiangning Chen, Yahua Wang
wiley   +1 more source

‘Deliberative Supranationalism’—Two Defences

European Law Journal, 2002
This paper responds in its first sections to a series of articles in which Rainer Schmalz‐Bruns developed a concept of legitimate governance beyond the constitutional state, which he called ‘deliberative supranationalism’ and contrasted with what Jürgen Neyer and the present author had suggested under the same title.
openaire   +3 more sources

Globalisation and Supranationalism

1999
This extract from Shelley and Winck’s contribution to a quartet of books on What is Europe? draws attention to some of the main practical (everyday), political (policy) and sociological (theoretical) issues concerning the patterns, ramifications and implications of late-twentieth-century European cultures ...
Paul Close, Emiko Ohki-Close
openaire   +1 more source

Supranationalism

2016
Supranational governance should be unlikely, especially in Europe, with its long-established nation states. Yet, it is in Europe where the shift of executive, legislative, and judicial/legal authority to the supranational level has gone furthest.
openaire   +1 more source

Fighting Supranationalism, 1950–1959

2020
How should we respond to the establishment of the European Coal and Steel Community and the European Economic Community? These were fundamental foreign-policy questions for British and Norwegian governments in the 1950s. This chapter discusses the initial reactions and the chosen strategies.
openaire   +1 more source

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