ABSTRACT

A fresh analysis of policy convergences across nations, which identifies their key driving forces.

To what extent and in which direction can we empirically observe a convergence of national policies? In which areas and for which patterns of policy is convergence more or less pronounced? This text addresses these central questions with clarity and rigour.

With growing economic and institutional interlinkages between nation states, it is often assumed that there is an overall trend towards increasingly similar policies across countries. Comparative research on the domestic impact of globalization and European integration, however, reveals that policy convergence can hardly be considered as a dominant and uniform tendency which can be taken for granted. Although a number of factors have been suggested in order to account for the rather mixed empirical picture, we still have limited knowledge about the causes and conditions of cross-national policy convergence. In particular, the central mechanisms and conditions affecting both degree and level of cross-national policy convergence are yet not well understood.

This book will be of great interest to all students and scholars of the European Union, European politics, and international relations. This is a special issue of the leading Journal of European Public Policy.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction: Cross-national policy convergence

Concepts, approaches and explanatory factors

chapter 5|19 pages

Globalization, harmonization, and competition

The different pathways to policy convergence

chapter 6|25 pages

The international sources of policy convergence

Explaining the spread of environmental policy innovations

chapter 7|18 pages

Climate policy convergence in Europe

An assessment based on National Communications to the UNFCCC

chapter 8|21 pages

Central banks on the move

chapter 9|20 pages

Diffusion without convergence

How political context shapes the adoption of regulatory impact assessment

chapter 10|10 pages

Commentary: Policy convergence

A passing fad or a new integrating focus in European Union studies?