No. 97-4, December 2019
Index
- A genealogy of EU discourses and practices of deliberative governance: Beyond states and markets?
- Between cheap talk and epistocracy: The logic of interest group access in the European Parliament's committee hearings
- Beyond public policy: A public action languages approach Peter Kevin Spink Edward Elgar, 2019, 256 pp., £72.00 (hbk), ISBN: 9781 78811 874 3
- Clientelism, capitalism, and democracy: The rise of programmatic politics in the United States and Britain Didi Kuo, Cambridge University Press, 2018, 163 pp., £75 (hb), ISBN: 978‐1108426084
- Conceptualizing throughput legitimacy: Procedural mechanisms of accountability, transparency, inclusiveness and openness in EU governance
- Generalists and specialists in executive politics: Why ambitious meta‐policies so often fail
- How limited representativeness weakens throughput legitimacy in the EU: The example of interest groups
- How policy agendas change when autocracies liberalize: The case of Hong Kong, 1975–2016
- How politicians use performance information in a budgetary context: New insights from the central government level
- Implementing European case law at the bureaucratic frontline: How domestic signalling influences the outcomes of EU law
- Issue Information
- Navigating the dichotomy: The top public servant's craft
- Regulating lobbying through voluntary transparency clubs: The connoisseurs’ assessment. Evidence from the European Union
- The circulation of public officials in a fragmented system: Urban governance networks in Paris
- The environmental determinants of diversity management: Competition, collaboration and clients
- The limits of proceduralism: Critical remarks on the rise of ‘throughput legitimacy’
- The partisan–professional dichotomy revisited: Politicization and decision‐making of senior civil servants
- The policy state: An American predicament Karen Orren and Stephen Skowronek, Harvard University Press, 2017, 272 pp., (pbk, 2019), £12.95, ISBN: 9780674237872
- Transferring emotional capital as coerced discretion: Street‐level bureaucrats reconciling structural deficiencies