Open AccessBook
Multi-Level Governance and European Integration
Liesbet Hooghe,Gary Marks +1 more
- 01 Jan 2001
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TL;DR: This book discusses multi-level governance in the European Union, the sources of Multi-level Governance, and why national leaders Diffuse Authority.
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Abstract: Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Multi-level Governance in the European Union Part 3 Part I: Sources of Multi-level Governance Chapter 4 A Historical Perspective Chapter 5 Multiple Identities Chapter 6 Why National Leaders Diffuse Authority Part 7 Part II: Multi-Level Governance with the Regions Chapter 8 Variations in Cohesion Policy Chapter 9 Cohesion Policy Under Threat Chapter 10 Channels to Europe Part 11 Part III:Contestation in a Multi-Level Polity Chapter 12 The Struggle over European Integration Chapter 13 Supranationalism Contested in the Commission Chapter 14 Political Parties Take a Stand Chapter 15 Bibliography Chapter 16 Index Chapter 17 Appendices
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Wine in their veins : France and the European Community's common wine policy, 1967-1980
Maria X. Chen
- 01 Dec 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the impact of the European Community on table wine growers in the Midi region of France in the 1970s and argue that the first decade of the Common Wine Policy changed relationships between different groups at the European, national, and local level in two major ways: first, national French government institutions voluntarily decreased their power over a key national industry and this was the most marked feature in the French wine industry of this time period.
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The Impact of European Legislation on National Legislation in the Netherlands
Mark Bovens,Kutsal Yesilkagit +1 more
- 20 Oct 2004
TL;DR: Work in progress, please do not quote without permission as discussed by the authors, see Section 5.2.1] for a summary of the work in Section 2.3.1.0.
Transition Management: toward a prescriptive model for multi-level governance systems
Derk Loorbach,Ronald van Raak +1 more
- 01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a shift from the centralized government-based nation-state, towards liberalized, market-based and decentralized decision-making structures, where the power of central government to make policies and implement these has decreased.