Functional Representation and Democracy in the EU: The European Commission and Social NGOs

Author:   Corinna Wolff
Publisher:   ECPR Press
ISBN:  

9781907301650


Pages:   330
Publication Date:   01 November 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Functional Representation and Democracy in the EU: The European Commission and Social NGOs


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Author:   Corinna Wolff
Publisher:   ECPR Press
Imprint:   ECPR Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.231kg
ISBN:  

9781907301650


ISBN 10:   1907301658
Pages:   330
Publication Date:   01 November 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

'Much analysis of new modes of governance and of OMC mixes vague normative expectations with weak empirical analysis. But Corinna Wolff's book is quite distinctive in its research method, theoretical reflections, in-depth analysis and scholarly caution. It makes a major contribution, not just to studies of policy-making innovation in the European Union, or to the complexities of political representation in the EU's multilevel polity, but to our understanding of a critical dimension of European integration today ‒ the legitimacy of its rapidly evolving system of governance.' Professor Martin Rhodes, University of Denver 'This book starts from the assumption that the ideas of those who organise participation determine, to an important extent, what may be expected in terms of democratic legitimacy. Accordingly, the author provides a material-rich analysis of what concept of participation and democratic legitimacy governs EU social policy and how it has shaped the modes of involving the affected. She arrives at a sobering conclusion: There is nothing democratic about functional representation per se ‒ and particularly not in the EU.' Professor Beate Kohler-Koch, University of Mannheim 'Corinna Wolff's book fills an important gap in the literature of normative theories of democracy which have somehow overlooked the growing saliency of functional representation in multi-level composite political systems like the EU. This book is essential reading for scholars interested in representation and participation in new modes of governance, as much as for those who want a better understanding of how contemporary democratic systems work.' Professor Susana Borras, Copenhgen Business School


'Much analysis of new modes of governance and of OMC mixes vague normative expectations with weak empirical analysis. But Corinna Wolff's book is quite distinctive in its research method, theoretical reflections, in-depth analysis and scholarly caution. It makes a major contribution, not just to studies of policy-making innovation in the European Union, or to the complexities of political representation in the EU's multilevel polity, but to our understanding of a critical dimension of European integration today ‒ the legitimacy of its rapidly evolving system of governance.' Professor Martin Rhodes, University of Denver 'This book starts from the assumption that the ideas of those who organise participation determine, to an important extent, what may be expected in terms of democratic legitimacy. Accordingly, the author provides a material-rich analysis of what concept of participation and democratic legitimacy governs EU social policy and how it has shaped the modes of involving the affected. She arrives at a sobering conclusion: There is nothing democratic about functional representation per se ‒ and particularly not in the EU.' Professor Beate Kohler-Koch, University of Mannheim 'Corinna Wolff's book fills an important gap in the literature of normative theories of democracy which have somehow overlooked the growing saliency of functional representation in multi-level composite political systems like the EU. This book is essential reading for scholars interested in representation and participation in new modes of governance, as much as for those who want a better understanding of how contemporary democratic systems work.' Professor Susana Borras, Copenhgen Business School


'Much analysis of new modes of governance and of OMC mixes vague normative expectations with weak empirical analysis. But Corinna Wolff's book is quite distinctive in its research method, theoretical reflections, in-depth analysis and scholarly caution. It makes a major contribution, not just to studies of policy-making innovation in the European Union, or to the complexities of political representation in the EU's multilevel polity, but to our understanding of a critical dimension of European integration today - the legitimacy of its rapidly evolving system of governance.' Professor Martin Rhodes, University of Denver 'This book starts from the assumption that the ideas of those who organise participation determine, to an important extent, what may be expected in terms of democratic legitimacy. Accordingly, the author provides a material-rich analysis of what concept of participation and democratic legitimacy governs EU social policy and how it has shaped the modes of involving the affected. She arrives at a sobering conclusion: There is nothing democratic about functional representation per se - and particularly not in the EU.' Professor Beate Kohler-Koch, University of Mannheim 'Corinna Wolff's book fills an important gap in the literature of normative theories of democracy which have somehow overlooked the growing saliency of functional representation in multi-level composite political systems like the EU. This book is essential reading for scholars interested in representation and participation in new modes of governance, as much as for those who want a better understanding of how contemporary democratic systems work.' Professor Susana Borras, Copenhgen Business School


Author Information

Corinna Wolff holds a PhD from the University of Tampere, Finland. With Professor Osmo Apunen she has co-written a book about Finnish foreign and defence policy 1938 - 1948.

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