Role of Political Parties in the European Union

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Co-decision Report
comparative politics
Conciliation Delegates
delegations
democratic deficit
elite interviews
EP Party Group
EPP
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eq_society-politics
EU institutional analysis
EU Legislative
EU Legislative Body
EU Legislative Decision Making
EU Legislative Politics
European Political Groups
German MEP
group
groups
Individual MEPs
legislative
legislative behaviour
MEPs Vote
national
National Party Delegations
parliament
party
Party Group
Party Group Members
party influence in Brussels decision making
PGL
Political Parties
politics
process tracing
PSE Group
Socialist Party Group
Standing Committee Members
transnational
Transnational Parties
Transnational Party
Transnational Party Groups
voting
Voting Cohesion

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415499286
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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At the national level, political parties play an important role in making representative democracy work. They help to aggregate and communicate policy preferences, link decision-making between different legislative bodies and hold politicians accountable. In the European Union, however, the electoral connection is weak. This casts doubt on the impact of partisan politics at the European level. Are political parties able to fulfil their role as ‘transmission belts’ ensuring political accountability and consistent decision-making in the European Union? To answer this question we look at the micro foundations of partisan politics in the European Union.

The contributions in this volume all depart from a common theoretical framework but use a wide range of empirical data and research designs, covering qualitative process-tracing, elite interview and large-N quantitative analysis. Moreover, they examine party effects in the electoral and legislative arena. Finally, the volume covers all European institutions: the Commission, the Council of the European Union, the European Council and the European Parliament. The findings enhance our understanding of the workings of decision-making in Brussels, add to the debate on the EU democratic deficit, and highlight the usefulness of drawing upon insights from the literature on Comparative Politics when studying the European Union.

This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.

Björn Lindberg is a post-doctoral researcher at the Department of Government at Uppsala University in Sweden. He has published on legislative decision-making and party politics in the EU. Anne Rasmussen is Assistant Professor at the Department of Public administration at Leiden University (NL). She has published on EU decision-making, the role of the EU institutions and institutional change in the EU. Andreas Warntjen is Assistant Professor of European and International Politics at the Department of Political Science and Research Methods at the University of Twente (NL). He has published on EU legislative politics and the legislative effect of the Council Presidency.