Functional and Territorial Interest Representation in the EU

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Brussels Regional Offices
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Category=JPH
Civil Society
comparative lobbying strategies
consultations
CoR Member
Dg Employment
Dg SANCO
Dg Trade
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EU Environment
EU Governance
EU Institution
EU Interest Representation
EU Level
EU Level Association
EU Level Interest
EU Lobbying
EU Multi-level System
EU Policy Make
EU Political System
EU System
european
European governance actors
European Multi-level System
European Multilevel System
European Umbrella Organisations
Functional Interest Representation
interest group participation European policy
Interest Intermediation
Interest Representation
interests
intermediation
member
online
organisations
professionalised lobbying networks
public interest groups EU
regional policy advocacy
representatives
stakeholder consultation processes
state
Territorial Interest Representation
umbrella

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138107632
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 25 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Despite a substantial legacy of literature on EU interest representation, there is no systematic analysis available on whether a European model of interest representation in EU governance is detectable across functional, and territorial, categories of actors. ‘Functional’ actors include associations for business interests, the professions, and trade unions, as well as ‘NGOs’ and social movements; territorial based entities include public actors (such as regional and local government), as well as actors primarily organised at territorial level. What are the similarities and differences between territorial, and functional, based entities, and are the similarities greater than the differences? Are the differences sufficient to justify the use of different analytical tools? Are the differences within these categories more significant than those across them? Is there a ‘professionalised European lobbying class’ across all actor types? Does national embeddedness make a difference? Which factors explain the success of actors to participate in European governance?

This book was originally published as special issue of Journal of European Integration.

Michèle Knodt is Jean Monnet Professor for European Integration and Comparative Politics at the Technical University Darmstadt, Germany. Christine Quittkat is a Researcher at the Centre for European Social Research (MZES)/University of Mannheim, Germany. Justin Greenwood is Professor of European Public Policy at the Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK, and a Visiting Professor at the College of Europe.