The Engines of European Integration: Delegation, Agency, and Agenda Setting in the EUThe European Union is composed of its fifteen member governments, yet these governments have chosen repeatedly to delegate executive, judicial and legislative powers and substantial discretion to supranational institutions such as the Commission, the Court of Justice, and the European Parliament. In The Engines of European Integration, the first full-length study of delegation in the European Union and international politics, Mark Pollack draws on principal-agent analyses of delegation, agency and agenda setting to analyze and explain the delegation of powers by governmental principals to supranational agents, and the role played by those agents in the process of European integration. In the first part of the book, Pollack analyses the historical and functional patterns of delegation to the Commission, the Court of Justice, and the Parliament, suggesting that delegation to the first two is motivated by a desire to reduce the transaction costs of EU policymaking, as predicted by principal-agent models, while delegation of powers to the Parliament fits poorly with such models, and primarily reflects a concern by member governments to enhance the democratic legitimacy of the Union. The second part of the book focuses on the role of supranational agents in both the liberalization and the re-regulation of the European market, and suggests that the Commission, Court, and Parliament have indeed played a causally important role alongside member governments as "the engines of integration," but that their ability to do so has varied historically and across issue-areas as a function of the discretion delegated to them by the member governments. |
Contents
Delegation and Discretion | 73 |
Agency and Agenda Setting | 261 |
Conclusions | 375 |
Appendices | 415 |
Notes | 433 |
| 460 | |
| 487 | |
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The Engines of European Integration:Delegation, Agency, and Agenda Setting ... Mark A. Pollack No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
actors adoption agency agenda agenda-setting powers agreement amendments Amsterdam Treaty argued Article 141 Article 28 Barber Blair House budget budgetary Cassis Chapter co-decision comitology Community contrast control mechanisms cooperation procedure Council of Ministers Court of Justice credible commitments delegate powers delegation and discretion Directive draft EC law ECJ decisions EEC Treaty effect ernments EU's European Court European Parliament European Union Franchino functions Garrett hypotheses implementing initiative institutions intergovernmental intergovernmental conference interpretation issue areas judicial review legislative overruling limited Maastricht Maastricht Treaty measures member gov member governments member-state principals ments merger control national courts negotiations Nevertheless non-compliance oversight pension political preferences principal-agent procedure provisions qualified majority reform regard Regulation regulatory role rules Santer Commission secondary legislation setting Single European Act social specific Structural Funds supranational agents supranational organizations TEC Art tion trade Treaty of Nice Tsebelis unanimous vis-à-vis vote


