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This book explores the regulation of pesticides in the European
Union in order to reveal the complex, controversial, and contested
nature of an assessment system proudly declared by the EU to be
'the strictest in the world'. The current regulatory framework is
based on Regulation 1107/2009, which substantially reformed the
previous system. The analysis describes the new criteria and
procedures for the authorization of active substances to be used in
the production of pesticides, traces the lengthy policy formulation
process, and identifies factors that made policy change possible.
Further, the book illustrates the current controversies that
characterise the implementation of Regulation 1107/2009: the ban of
pesticides harmful to pollinators, the renewal of the authorization
of glyphosate, and the definition of criteria for the assessment of
endocrine disruption. The author provides information on policy
outcomes and highlights persisting shortcomings in the enforcement
of EU regulation. This book will appeal to students and scholars
from a variety of disciplines, including political science,
political sociology, and public policy.
Mapping the European Public Sphere combines theoretical and
empirical perspectives to address three relevant issues that are
marking the European communicative landscape: the role of media and
journalism in shaping the European debate, the function of public
communication in promoting institutional activities, and the
implications of processes of inclusion to and exclusion from the
public sphere. The volume offers a timely reflection on the
communicative arenas that are structuring the discourse on Europe
and its future and provides a map of existing communicative spaces
to provide a better understanding of the development of a European
Public Sphere and to identify critical issues. Situated in a timely
debate and providing well-grounded empirical evidence, the book
will be particularly valuable to social scientists researching
European integration issues. At the same time, the book is relevant
to those actors who are studied in the research, in particular
European institutions, media groups and NGOs.
This book explores the regulation of pesticides in the European
Union in order to reveal the complex, controversial, and contested
nature of an assessment system proudly declared by the EU to be
'the strictest in the world'. The current regulatory framework is
based on Regulation 1107/2009, which substantially reformed the
previous system. The analysis describes the new criteria and
procedures for the authorization of active substances to be used in
the production of pesticides, traces the lengthy policy formulation
process, and identifies factors that made policy change possible.
Further, the book illustrates the current controversies that
characterise the implementation of Regulation 1107/2009: the ban of
pesticides harmful to pollinators, the renewal of the authorization
of glyphosate, and the definition of criteria for the assessment of
endocrine disruption. The author provides information on policy
outcomes and highlights persisting shortcomings in the enforcement
of EU regulation. This book will appeal to students and scholars
from a variety of disciplines, including political science,
political sociology, and public policy.
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