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ID146186
Title ProperEuropean Union member states in cross-national analyses
Other Title Informationthe dangers of neglecting supranational policymaking
LanguageENG
AuthorWeinberg, Joe
Summary / Abstract (Note)Many empirical models make assumptions about the primacy of domestic politics that fail to accommodate new trends in supranational policy making. Scholars now acknowledge that national political decisions often depend on other countries, international institutions, or global economic conditions. More interestingly, many sovereign countries have either lost or purposely delegated away policy autonomy to supranational institutions. For example, fixed exchange rates, regional trade agreements, and transnational regulations create the distinct possibility that domestic politics no longer provide a sufficient explanation for many policy outcomes. In some respects, two types of countries now exist: those that retain decision-making authority over a given policy space and those that do not. Combining both types of countries into a larger cross-national sample may generate flawed substantive results and fails to adequately test hypotheses. I use the example of European Union (EU) governance over trade policy to demonstrate the empirical dangers of disregarding differences in policy autonomy among countries.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 60, No.1; Mar 2016: p. 98-106
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 60 No 1
Key WordsEuropean Union ;  Member States ;  Cross-National Analyses ;  Supranational Policymaking


 
 
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