Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series editors’ preface
- Acknowledgments
- Table of cases
- Table of treaties
- Table of legislation
- Table of Council Decisions
- Introduction
- 1 The origins of an Open Method of Coordination
- 2 Relating governance and law
- 3 Governance as proceduralisation
- 4 Assessing the procedural paradigm
- 5 Constitutionalising new governance
- Epilogue The future of the Open Method of Coordination
- Annex 1 Questions for the respondents
- Annex 2 List of non-governmental respondents
- Annex 3 History and development of the OMC SPSI (1997–2010)
- Annex 4 The new ‘streamlined’ OMC SPSI (2008–10)
- Bibliography
- Index
Series editors’ preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series editors’ preface
- Acknowledgments
- Table of cases
- Table of treaties
- Table of legislation
- Table of Council Decisions
- Introduction
- 1 The origins of an Open Method of Coordination
- 2 Relating governance and law
- 3 Governance as proceduralisation
- 4 Assessing the procedural paradigm
- 5 Constitutionalising new governance
- Epilogue The future of the Open Method of Coordination
- Annex 1 Questions for the respondents
- Annex 2 List of non-governmental respondents
- Annex 3 History and development of the OMC SPSI (1997–2010)
- Annex 4 The new ‘streamlined’ OMC SPSI (2008–10)
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Series editors’ preface
Amongst the burgeoning literature on governance in the EU, work which addresses the phenomenon of ‘new governance’ has begun to diversify in character. No longer does such work simply chart the emergence of new governance styles, noting in particular their utility for steering policy in areas where the member states are reluctant to cede sovereignty and to opt for the more traditional ‘Community method’, such as areas of social policy or even economic policy coordination. Studies are thus no longer always confined to particular sectors, or to descriptive analysis. New work now problematises the concept of ‘new’ governance, questioning what is ‘new’ about it, articulating how governance does or does not differ from the long-established term ‘government’ (always problematic in the EU context), and defining the parameters of an emergent legal theory of new governance. This is the central question of Mark Dawson’s elegantly written new volume, where he brings the concepts of law and governance into synergy and into conversation, rather than viewing them as oppositional concepts or regulative techniques. In that sense, new governance can be studied as an integrated dimension of the composite EU legal order, in a manner which takes into account the polyvalent and multilevel character of that order, with inputs not only from the EU institutions as lawmakers, but also from the member states’ constitutional frameworks and implementation apparatuses. Thus rather than being a study of a system of new governance as such, although along the way Dawson focuses on the so-called Open Method of Coordination as it is used in areas of social policy in relation to the so-called Lisbon strategy for promoting the competiveness and openness of the European economy, Dawson’s work represents a confrontation with a variety of theories which seek to explain the character, scope and nature of the European legal order, which focus in particular on the reflexive and procedural character of law.
While conceptually rich, Dawson’s work also has an interest for a wider audience, in a work that is fully aware of the practical implications of the EU and the member states adopting different approaches to major societal tasks, such as ensuring the sustainability of the welfare state, whilst protecting its key features such as universal coverage, as they have emerged in post second world war Europe. (Social) Law, therefore, needs to be intensely political, without losing all of its essentially normative character. Dawson’s work carefully retreads that well-worn path between law and politics, and between facts and norms.
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- New Governance and the Transformation of European LawCoordinating EU Social Law and Policy, pp. xiii - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011