European Blame Games - Where does the buck stop?
RITTBERGER Berthold , HEINKELMANN-WILD Tim , ZANGL Bernhard , KRIEGMAIR Lisa
Product details
- Categories: November 2024, EU Policies and Activities
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780192870636
- Publication Date: 15/10/2024
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 192
- Language: English
Summary
Who is held responsible when EU policies fail? Which blame games resonate in the European public?
European Blame Games
challenges the conventional wisdom that the complexity of EU
decision-making eschews clarity of responsibility, thereby rendering
European blame games untargeted and diffuse. The book argues that the
politicization of EU policies triggers a plausibility assessment of
blame attributions in the public domain with the effect that European
blame games gravitate towards true responsibilities, targeting those
political actors involved in enacting a policy that is subsequently
considered a policy failure.
It distinguishes three kinds of
European blame games. In scapegoat games, supranational EU institutions
are held responsible for a policy failure. Renegade games occur when
individual member state governments are considered the culprits for a
failed policy. When responsibility for a policy failure is shared
between EU institutions and member states, diffusion games prevail. The
book also explores three conditions to explain when each of the three
European blame games prevails: the type of policy failure, the type of
policy making, and the type of policy implementation. To empirically
probe these conditions, European Blame Games studies the blame
games in ten instances of EU policy failures, including EU foreign
policy, environmental policy, fiscal stabilization, and migration
policy.
Transformations in Governance is a major
academic book series from Oxford University Press. It is designed to
accommodate the impressive growth of research in comparative politics,
international relations, public policy, federalism, and environmental
and urban studies concerned with the dispersion of authority from
central states to supranational institutions, subnational governments,
and public-private networks. It brings together work that advances our
understanding of the organization, causes, and consequences of
multilevel and complex governance. The series is selective, containing
annually a small number of books of exceptionally high quality by
leading and emerging scholars.
Table of contents
1:Beyond blaming Europe
2:European blame games: a public plausibility assessment
3:The policy failure hypothesis (with Juliane Glovania and Louisa Klein-Bölting)
4:The policy making hypothesis
5:The policy implementation hypothesis(with Josef Lolacher)
6:The promise of European blame games