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Technocratic law and governance is under fire. Not only populist
movements have challenged experts. NGOs, public intellectuals and
some academics have also criticized the too close relation between
experts and power. While the amount of power gained by experts may
be contested, it is unlikely and arguably undesirable that experts
will cease to play an influential role in contemporary regulatory
regimes. This book focuses on whether and how experts involved in
policymaking can and should be held accountable. The book, divided
into four parts, combines theoretical analysis with a wide variety
of case studies expounding the challenges of holding experts
accountable in a multilevel setting. Part I offers new perspectives
on accountability of experts, including a critical comparison
between accountability and a virtue-ethical framework for experts,
a reconceptualization of accountability through the rule of law
prism and a discussion of different ways to operationalize expert
accountability. Parts I-IV, organized around in-depth case studies,
shed light on the accountability of experts in three high-profile
areas for technocratic governance in a European and global context:
economic and financial governance, environmental/health and safety
governance, and the governance of digitization and data protection.
By offering fresh insights into the manifold aspects of
technocratic decisionmaking and suggesting new avenues for
rethinking expert accountability within multilevel governance, this
book will be of great value not only to students and scholars in
international and EU law, political science, public administration,
science and technology studies but also to professionals working
within EU institutions and international organizations.
Technocratic law and governance is under fire. Not only populist
movements have challenged experts. NGOs, public intellectuals and
some academics have also criticized the too close relation between
experts and power. While the amount of power gained by experts may
be contested, it is unlikely and arguably undesirable that experts
will cease to play an influential role in contemporary regulatory
regimes. This book focuses on whether and how experts involved in
policymaking can and should be held accountable. The book, divided
into four parts, combines theoretical analysis with a wide variety
of case studies expounding the challenges of holding experts
accountable in a multilevel setting. Part I offers new perspectives
on accountability of experts, including a critical comparison
between accountability and a virtue-ethical framework for experts,
a reconceptualization of accountability through the rule of law
prism and a discussion of different ways to operationalize expert
accountability. Parts I-IV, organized around in-depth case studies,
shed light on the accountability of experts in three high-profile
areas for technocratic governance in a European and global context:
economic and financial governance, environmental/health and safety
governance, and the governance of digitization and data protection.
By offering fresh insights into the manifold aspects of
technocratic decisionmaking and suggesting new avenues for
rethinking expert accountability within multilevel governance, this
book will be of great value not only to students and scholars in
international and EU law, political science, public administration,
science and technology studies but also to professionals working
within EU institutions and international organizations.
This book examines a largely unexplored dimension of the European
agencies, namely their role in EU external relations and on the
international plane. International cooperation has become a salient
feature of EU agencies triggering important legal questions
regarding the scope and limits of their international dimension,
the nature and effects of their international cooperation
instruments, their status within the EU and on the global level,
and leading potentially to tensions between EU law and
international law. This book fills the existing knowledge gap by
scrutinizing the international cooperation legal framework and
practice of EU agencies, including their mandate, tasks and
instruments, together with their legal status as actors with a
global dimension. It sets out a general legal-analytical framework
which combines legal parameters from EU and international law to
assess EU agencies as global actors, and examines in detail three
case studies on carefully selected agencies to shed light on the
complexities of EU agencies' daily international cooperation.
This book examines a largely unexplored dimension of the European
agencies, namely their role in EU external relations and on the
international plane. International cooperation has become a salient
feature of EU agencies triggering important legal questions
regarding the scope and limits of their international dimension,
the nature and effects of their international cooperation
instruments, their status within the EU and on the global level,
and leading potentially to tensions between EU law and
international law. This book fills the existing knowledge gap by
scrutinizing the international cooperation legal framework and
practice of EU agencies, including their mandate, tasks and
instruments, together with their legal status as actors with a
global dimension. It sets out a general legal-analytical framework
which combines legal parameters from EU and international law to
assess EU agencies as global actors, and examines in detail three
case studies on carefully selected agencies to shed light on the
complexities of EU agencies' daily international cooperation.
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