|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
How do regulatory structures evolve in EU financial governance?
Incorporating insights from a variety of disciplines, Governing
Finance in Europe provides a comprehensive framework to investigate
the dynamics leading to centralisation, decentralisation and
fragmentation in EU financial regulation. Offering a comprehensive
and generalizable theoretical account of regulatory centralisation,
this book combines theoretical approaches from political science,
law, sociology and economics to trace centralisation in EU
financial governance. Contributors build on a rich political
science and legal literature and offer empirical analyses of major
EU legislative packages in financial regulation, including the
Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) and
Capital Markets Union (CMU). This book systematically identifies
and examines the forces and counter-forces on regulatory
centralisation. It also offers conjectures as to who benefits from
the regulation and how decision-makers are held politically and
legally accountable. Featuring contributions from internationally
renowned scholars, this book is key reading for academics working
in finance and financial policies, particularly those investigating
European politics, regulation and regional integration. It will
also be of interest to practitioners and policymakers, as chapters
provide unique insights into the real-world implications of
financial regulation. Contributors include: F. Bulfone, J.
Ganderson, A. Heritier, J. Karremans, H. Marjosola, M.G. Schoeller,
A. Smolenska, M. Strand
Leadership of powerful states and organizations is crucial for the
success of regional integration projects. This book offers a
theoretical model explaining such leadership. By applying the model
to eurozone governance and reform, the book combines innovative
theorizing on leadership in regional and international affairs with
original research on Economic and Monetary Union politics. Six
in-depth case studies analyze the (non-)leadership of Germany and
EU institutions in eurozone crisis management. Moreover, the book
evaluates the eurozone's leadership record since the outbreak of
its crisis and helps readers understand the leadership of
collective actors, and the extent to which they can contribute to
overcoming crisis and fostering European integration. In
particular, the book investigates the under-researched questions of
who provided leadership in the eurozone crisis and why, and which
conditions are required to achieve successful leadership in the EU.
"If one wants to understand why, from its modest beginnings, the
European Parliament has become a major player in EU
decision-making, look no further than this book. It presents, to
date, the theoretically most compelling, methodologically
disciplined and empirically richest account of parliamentary
self-empowerment over time, across key functions and policy areas.
This volume will be a main point of reference for work on the
European Parliament, the dynamics of inter-institutional politics,
and EU integration more generally for years to come."-Berthold
Rittberger, Professor of International Relations, University of
Munich, Germany "Anyone interested in the rise of the European
Parliament as a significant actor in the EU should read this book.
It offers a fascinating insight into the strategies used by the
Parliament to achieve its aims and the conditions for its success
or failure. It ranges widely across time and policy areas to give a
comprehensive analysis of the Parliament's changing institutional
position."-Michael Shackleton, Professor of European Institutions,
Maastricht University, The Netherlands, and former EP official This
book analyses the European Parliament's strategies of
self-empowerment over time stretching across cases of new
institutional prerogatives as well as substantive policy areas. It
considers why and how the Parliament has managed to gain formal and
informal powers in this wide variety of cases. The book provides a
systematic and comparative analysis of the European Parliament's
formal and informal empowerment in two broad sets of cases: on the
one hand, it examines the EP's empowerment since the Treaty of Rome
in three areas that are characteristic of parliamentary
democracies, namely legislation, the budget, and the investiture of
the executive. On the other hand, it analyses the European
Parliament's role in highly politicised policy areas, namely
Economic and Monetary Governance and the shaping of EU trade
agreements.
"If one wants to understand why, from its modest beginnings, the
European Parliament has become a major player in EU
decision-making, look no further than this book. It presents, to
date, the theoretically most compelling, methodologically
disciplined and empirically richest account of parliamentary
self-empowerment over time, across key functions and policy areas.
This volume will be a main point of reference for work on the
European Parliament, the dynamics of inter-institutional politics,
and EU integration more generally for years to come."-Berthold
Rittberger, Professor of International Relations, University of
Munich, Germany "Anyone interested in the rise of the European
Parliament as a significant actor in the EU should read this book.
It offers a fascinating insight into the strategies used by the
Parliament to achieve its aims and the conditions for its success
or failure. It ranges widely across time and policy areas to give a
comprehensive analysis of the Parliament's changing institutional
position."-Michael Shackleton, Professor of European Institutions,
Maastricht University, The Netherlands, and former EP official This
book analyses the European Parliament's strategies of
self-empowerment over time stretching across cases of new
institutional prerogatives as well as substantive policy areas. It
considers why and how the Parliament has managed to gain formal and
informal powers in this wide variety of cases. The book provides a
systematic and comparative analysis of the European Parliament's
formal and informal empowerment in two broad sets of cases: on the
one hand, it examines the EP's empowerment since the Treaty of Rome
in three areas that are characteristic of parliamentary
democracies, namely legislation, the budget, and the investiture of
the executive. On the other hand, it analyses the European
Parliament's role in highly politicised policy areas, namely
Economic and Monetary Governance and the shaping of EU trade
agreements.
Leadership of powerful states and organizations is crucial for the
success of regional integration projects. This book offers a
theoretical model explaining such leadership. By applying the model
to eurozone governance and reform, the book combines innovative
theorizing on leadership in regional and international affairs with
original research on Economic and Monetary Union politics. Six
in-depth case studies analyze the (non-)leadership of Germany and
EU institutions in eurozone crisis management. Moreover, the book
evaluates the eurozone's leadership record since the outbreak of
its crisis and helps readers understand the leadership of
collective actors, and the extent to which they can contribute to
overcoming crisis and fostering European integration. In
particular, the book investigates the under-researched questions of
who provided leadership in the eurozone crisis and why, and which
conditions are required to achieve successful leadership in the EU.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Sound Of Freedom
Jim Caviezel, Mira Sorvino, …
DVD
R325
R218
Discovery Miles 2 180
|