The politics of information : the case of the European Union / edited by Tannelie Blom and Sophie Vanhoonacker.
Material type: TextSeries: Publication details: [Basingstoke] : Palgrave Macmillan, (c)2014.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781137325419
- JN30 .P655 2014
- COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission: https://lib.ciu.edu/copyright-request-form
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) | G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE | Non-fiction | JN30 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available | ocn883902875 |
Starting from the basic assumption that institutionalized processes of information transfers are never entirely neutral but advantage certain types of information over others, this powerful collection presents the results of a research agenda that, through empirical investigation, systematically examines how information plays a key role in policy-making. As a very dynamic environment characterized by many different modes of information gathering and processing, the European Union forms a particularly interesting venue in which to test the 'politics of information' approach. With a mandate to go beyond the general assertion that informational asymmetry matters, the study has selected a number of pivotal EU actors and policy areas, studying them through 'information lenses'. More concretely the different contributions present a better understanding of the politics of information by examining the formal rules of information access, distribution and processing and by studying how these rules are applied in the day-to-day policy process.
1. The Politics of Information: A New Research Agenda; Tannelie Blom and Sophie Vanhoonacker -- -- PART I: CONCEPTUAL AND HISTROICAL REFLECTIONS -- 2. The Politics of Information: An Organization Theoretical Perspective; Tannelie Blom -- 3 Information Processes and International Organisations (1910-1940); Michael Geary and Nico Randeraad -- 4 The Politics of Peer Reviewing: Comparing the OECD and the EU; Thomas Conzelmann -- -- PART II: INSTITUTIONS -- -- 5. COREPER: Linking Capitals and Brussels; Jeffrey Lewis -- 6. Who Selects What and How? How the European Parliament Obtains and Processes Information for Policy-Making; Mathias Dobbels and Christine Neuhold -- 7. The Politics of Information in the EU: The Case of European Agencies; Tannelie Blom, Loes van Suijlekom, Esther Versluis and Martin Wirtz -- -- PART III: INTERESTS AND EXPERTISE -- -- 8. The European Commission's Relations with Interest Organisations: Master of the Information Universe?; Justin Greenwood -- 9. The European Commission's Expert Groups as an Information System ; Ase Gornitzka and Ulf Sverdrup -- 10. Informational Asymmetries in the EU: Fault Lines Running Through the Comitology System; Thomas Christiansen -- 11. Information, Expertise and the Common Agricultural Policy: The Role and Influence of European Farm Organizations in Historical Perspective; Carine Germond -- -- PART IV: INFORMING THE PUBLIC -- -- 12. The Commission, the Politics of Information and the European Public Sphere ; Patrick Bijsmans -- 13. The European Parliament 'On Air'; Michael Shackleton -- PART V: INFORMATION IN THE FIELD OF FOREIGN POLICY AND SECURITY -- 14. EU Foreign Policy and the Politics of Information; Federica Bicchi -- 15. Information in EU Security and Defence; Hylke Dijkstra -- 16. Intelligence and EU External Relations: Operational to Constitutive Politics ; Simon Duke -- 17. The Politics of Information in EU Internal Security: Information Sharing by European Agencies; Madalina Busuioc and Deirdre Curtin -- 18. Conclusion; Tannelie Blom and Sophie Vanhoonacker.
Includes bibliographies and index.
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