ABSTRACT

The executive branch of government in Europe is being gradually transformed in several significant respects. First, executive power has been continuously strengthened at the EU level in the form of the European Commission, EU-level agencies and diplomatic and military staff in the Union Council secretariat. Second, EU executive bodies relate directly to (regulatory) authorities at the national level in charge of applying (and partly preparing) EU laws and programmes, partly circumventing ministerial departments. Thus, parts of national administrations become parts of an integrated and multi-level Union administration as well as parts of national executives. Such a system with multiple political masters raises delicate questions about political steering and accountability. This book focuses on this fascinating development both from a political science and a legal perspective, encompassing the consolidation of the supranational executive as well as its relationships with its ‘partners’ at the national level.

This book was published as a special issue of West European Politics.

chapter 1|23 pages

Tradition and Innovation

Europe's Accumulated Executive Order

chapter 3|24 pages

Bureaucratic Change in the European Administrative Space

The Case of the European Commission

chapter 4|24 pages

Beyond the Myth of Nationality

Analysing Networks within the European Commission

chapter 7|18 pages

European Administration

Centralisation and Fragmentation as Means of Polity-building?

chapter 8|17 pages

Delegation of Powers in the European Union

The Need for a Multi-principals Model

chapter 9|31 pages

Reshaping European Regulatory Space

An Evolutionary Analysis

chapter 10|18 pages

Halfway House

The 2006 Comitology Reforms and the European Parliament