
The Coordination of the European Union
Exploring the Capacities of Networked Governance
Oxford University Press
Published on 1. November 2006
Book
Hardback
336 pages
978-0-19-928695-9 (ISBN)
Description
All policy systems are struggling to respond to wicked policy problems like international terrorism, drug crime and unsustainable development, none more so than the European Union (EU) which is renowned for its fluidity, deeply sectorized structures and weak political leadership. As the traditional mode of coordinating - essentially issuing regulation - no longer commands sufficient political support, the EU has turned to what are increasingly termed soft or 'new' modes of governance, which rely upon different actors working together in relatively non-hierarchical networks. New modes of governance are in vogue because they appear to provide the EU with a new way to add value to national level activities without the slow and process of agreeing new legislation or the cost associated with building new administrative capacities in Brussels. This analysis provides the first book-length account of how effective network-based modes are at addressing problems that simultaneously demand greater levels of horizontal and vertical coordination.Taking, as an example, the thirty year struggle to build environmental thinking into all areas and levels of EU policy making, it systematically explores the steps that two major EU institutions (the European Commission and the European Parliament), and three member states (Germany, the Netherlands and the UK) have (not) taken to build effective networked governance.
By blending state of the art theories with new empirical findings, it offers a stark reminder that networked governance is not and has never been a panacea. Coordinating networks do not spontaneously 'self organise' in the EU; they have to be carefully designed as part of a repertoire of different coordinating instruments. The book concludes that the EU urgently needs to devote more of its time to the more mundane but important task of auditing and managing network, which, paradoxically, is an exercise in hierarchy. In so doing, this book helps to strip away some of the rhetorical claims made about the novelty and appeal of new modes, to reveal a much more sober and realistic appraisal of their coordinating potential.
By blending state of the art theories with new empirical findings, it offers a stark reminder that networked governance is not and has never been a panacea. Coordinating networks do not spontaneously 'self organise' in the EU; they have to be carefully designed as part of a repertoire of different coordinating instruments. The book concludes that the EU urgently needs to devote more of its time to the more mundane but important task of auditing and managing network, which, paradoxically, is an exercise in hierarchy. In so doing, this book helps to strip away some of the rhetorical claims made about the novelty and appeal of new modes, to reveal a much more sober and realistic appraisal of their coordinating potential.
Reviews / Votes
`The European Union is based on the truth that the value of the whole is greater than the sums of the parts, and it is clear that more coherent co-ordination between Member States and the Institutions can add to that value. This book helps to illuminate what is being done to pursue that course and demystifies how it should be done by focusing on the specific and challenging policy issue of the environment. The result is a lucid and practical indication of the way in which the EU could and should develop to provide greater and more efficient co-ordination, better policy results, and no expansion of administrative costs. I commend this book strongly.'
Lord Neil Kinnock, Chairman of the British Council and former Vice President of the European Commission responsible for administrative reform (1999-2004)
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Numerous tables
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 160 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-928695-9 (9780199286959)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Andrew Jordan | Adriaan Schout
The Coordination of the European Union
Exploring the Capacities of Networked Governance
Book
10/2008
Oxford University Press
€61.36
Shipment within 15-20 days
Persons
Author
Reader in Environmental Politics and Philip Leverhulme Prize Fellow, University of East Anglia
Associate Professor, European Institute of Public Administration, Maastricht, The Netherlands
Content
1. Political Ambitions and Coordination Capacities: The management of horizontal and vertical interdependence; 2. Multilevel Coordination Capacities; 3. Environmental Policy Integration at EU Level: A catalogue of coordinating capacities; 4. The Coordination of European Union Policy: Actor perspectives; 5. Environmental Policy Integration: Actor perspectives; 6. Germany: A reactive and passive coordinator?; 7. The Netherlands: From event to issue coordination?; 8. The United Kingdom: Strong administration but weak political ambitions?; 9. The European Commission: An organization in transition?; 10. The European Parliament: A partially disengaged partner?; 11. The Coordination of the European Union: Understanding the capacities of networked governance