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Coordinated European Governance: Self‐Organizing or Centrally Steered?
Authors:Adriaan Schout  Andrew Jordan
Institution:Associate Professor at the European Institute of Public Administration in Maastricht and Senior Researcher at the Clingendael European Studies Programme, The Hague.;Philip Leverhulme Prize Fellow at the University of East Anglia, Norwich.
Abstract:Now that it is widely accepted that the European Union (EU) constitutes a system of governance, analysts need actively to explore precisely how it may affect the continuing struggle better to coordinate national and European administrations. In its 2001 White Paper on governance, the European Commission interpreted governance to mean less central control and more network-led steering. Its interpretation of such networks is that they are self-organizing. Drawing upon an empirical study of environmental policy integration (EPI) in the EU, this article shows that this vision may not adequately fit the multi-actor, multi-level coordination challenges associated with some EU problems. By studying the administrative capacities that the European Commission and three member states have created to achieve better environmental coordination, this article shows significant administrative weaknesses. It concludes that the coordination challenges now troubling the EU require a more thoughtful discussion of network management than the White Paper suggests.
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