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Introduction: The European Semester as a new architecture of EU socioeconomic governance in theory and practice

TLDR
The European Semester as mentioned in this paper is a framework for policy co-ordination across European Union (EU) member states, which represents a major step in EU governance and has been used to provide a new socioeconomic governance architecture to coordinate national policies without transferring full sovereignty to the EU level.
Abstract
The ‘European Semester’, a new framework for policy co-ordination across European Union (EU) member states, represents a major step in EU governance. Created in 2010 in the wake of the financial and sovereign debt crises and revamped in 2015, it was intended to provide a new socioeconomic governance architecture to co-ordinate national policies without transferring full sovereignty to the EU level. This introduction offers a brief overview and assessment of the European Semester, examining its implications along three critical axes, running respectively between the economic and the social, the supranational and the intergovernmental, and the technocratic and democratic poles of EU governance. We introduce and briefly summarize the seven other contributions that make up this collection. Our conclusions are that the European Semester challenges established theoretical understandings of EU governance, as it is a prime example of the complexity that supersedes simple polar oppositions.

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Researching COVID-19: A research agenda for public policy and administration scholars

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors sketch some possible ways in which the public policy and administration community can make an enduring commitment to the COVID-19 challenge. But, they do not discuss how to tackle the challenges of public policy.
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Parliamentary accountability in multilevel governance: what role for parliaments in post-crisis EU economic governance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that parliamentary powers have been compromised in EU economic governance and that the loss in parliamentary powers is not compensated at the European level, as at that level political authority is effectively left suspended between the national governments who are unaccountable as a collective, and the European Commission which lacks a political mandate of its own.
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European Union Responses to the Covid-19 Pandemic: adaptability in times of Permanent Emergency

TL;DR: In this paper, the challenges of Covid-19 for the European Union (EU) during March-August 2020 are explored, and the authors argue that contrary to prior crises the EU has demonstrated a certain degree of adaptability.
Posted Content

Commission Entrepreneurship and the Debasing of Social Europe Before and After the Eurocrisis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show how the European Commission has actively promoted a policy agenda focused on liberal market building at the expense of socially minded regulation, and they substantiate this claim by documenting the activity of the Commission in two crucial policy domains of the post-Lisbon era.
Journal ArticleDOI

The European Union: security governance and collective securitisation

TL;DR: This article argues that it is possible for securitisation to occur in a ‘collective’ setting such as the EU and articulates a framework through which collective secur itisation can be understood – one that is then applied in a series of cases in the remainder of the Special Issue.
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Journal ArticleDOI

The New Intergovernmentalism: European Integration in the Post‐Maastricht Era

TL;DR: The post-Maastricht period is marked by an integration paradox as discussed by the authors, where the basic constitutional features of the European Union have remained stable, EU activity has expanded to an unprecedented degree.
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The Unexpected Winner of the Crisis: The European Commission’s Strengthened Role in Economic Governance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the role of the European Commission in financial stability support, economic policy surveillance, coordination of national polices and supervision of the financial sector in the European Union.
Book

The European Council and the Council: New intergovernmentalism and institutional change

Uwe Puetter
TL;DR: The European Council: From law-making to policy coordination as mentioned in this paper The European Council is the new centre of political gravity in the European Union and the future of European integration is discussed in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socializing the European Semester: EU social and economic policy co-ordination in crisis and beyond

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse how EU social objectives and policy co-ordination have been integrated into the Union's post-crisis governance architecture, highlighting the contribution of strategic agency, reflexive learning and creative adaptation by social and employment actors to the new institutional conditions of the European Semester, building on recent theoretical work on actor-centred constructivism and theusages of Europe.
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A new era of European Integration? Governance of labour market and social policy since the sovereign debt crisis

TL;DR: In this article, a typology of European Union integration is developed to capture how, to what extent and according to which policy aims EU involvement in Member States has altered with respect to labour market and social policy and what it signifies in terms of institutional change.
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