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The Differential Empowering Effects of Europeanization on the Autonomy of National Agencies

TLDR
The authors examined the influence of Europeanization on the relationship between ministries and agencies at the national level and found that the differentiated nature of the international environment transforms national agencies into policy-developing actors that shape policies without being directly influenced by their national political principals.
Abstract
This article examines the influence of Europeanization on the relationship between ministries and agencies at the national level. The core argument is that the differentiated nature of the international environment (with policy development often transferred to the international level and policy implementation left at the national level) transforms national agencies into policy-developing actors that shape policies without being directly influenced by their national political principals. The increasingly common involvement of national agencies in European policymaking processes thereby increases these agencies' policy-development autonomy but does not change their role in policy implementation. We examine this argument by testing an innovative hypothesis—the differentiation hypothesis—on a combined data set of German and Dutch national agencies. Our empirical findings support the hypothesis in both countries, suggesting that similar effects can be expected in other contexts in which semiautonomous agencies are involved in transnational policymaking.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Researching European Union Agencies: What Have We Learnt (and Where Do We Go from Here)?

TL;DR: The authors reviewed studies on EU agencies' organization, tasks, proliferation and location in the political-administrative space, and suggested a future research agenda for accountability relations in the European Commission.
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Why strong coordination at one level of government is incompatible with strong coordination across levels (and how to live with it): the case of the european union

TL;DR: In this article, the coordination dilemma is theoretically and empirically illustrated by the seeming incompatibility between a more direct implementation structure in the multilevel EU administrative system and trends towards strengthening coordination and control within nation states.
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Transnational bureaucratic politics : an institutional rivalry perspective on EU network governance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the emergence of transnational institutions, their functioning, their impact on the domestic level, and the diffusion of regulatory standards, and sketch pertinent areas for further research building upon this perspective.
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Europe at the frontline: analysing street-level motivations for the use of European Union migration law

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate what motivates the use of European Union (EU) law at the street level of migration law implementation and find that substantive moral norms and instrumental motivations trigger some implementers to rely on EU law.
Journal ArticleDOI

Filling the gap in the European administrative space: The role of administrative networks in EU implementation and enforcement

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a model to fill the gap between the EU's policy ambitions and its limited ad-spaces by using European administrative networks (EANs).
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