TY - BOOK AU - Windhoff-Héritier,Adrienne TI - Policy-making and diversity in Europe: escaping deadlock T2 - Theories of institutional design SN - 0511002904 AV - JN32 .W55 1999eb U1 - 338.94 21 PY - 1999/// CY - Cambridge, UK, New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Political planning KW - European Union countries KW - Policy sciences KW - Union européenne KW - Sciences de la politique KW - Politique publique KW - Pays de l'Union européenne KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Public Policy KW - Economic Policy KW - bisacsh KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS KW - Government & Business KW - Development KW - Economic Development KW - Business Development KW - Structural Adjustment KW - General KW - fast KW - Politischer Prozess KW - gnd KW - Politieke besluitvorming KW - gtt KW - Europese Unie KW - EU-landen KW - Europäische Union KW - swd KW - Comunidad Europea KW - Política y gobierno KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 99-108) and index; 1. Escaping deadlock: policy-making in Europe -- 2. The context of subterfuge: diversity, fragmentation and the malleability of the European polity -- 3. The analytical approach and theoretical background -- 4. Market-making policy: transport and telecommunications -- 5. The provision of collective goods and the reduction of externalities: environmental policy -- 6. Market-correcting, redistributive policy: regional and social policy -- 7. Market-correcting, distributive policy: research and technology -- 8. Summary and conclusion: stalemate and subterfuge across policy areas N2 - Policy-Making and Diversity in Europe examines the European polity and its policy-making processes. In particular, it asks how an institution which is so riddled with veto points manages to be such an active and aggressive policy maker. Héritier argues that the diversity of actors' interests and the consensus-forcing nature of European institutions would almost inevitably stall the decision-making process, were it not for the existence of creative informal strategies and policy-making patterns. Termed by the author 'subterfuge', these strategies prevent political impasses and 'make Europe work'. The book examines the presence of subterfuge in the policy domains of market-making, the provision of collective goods, redistribution and distribution. Subterfuge is seen to reinforce the primary functions of the European polity: the accommodation of diversity, policy innovation and democratic legitimation. Professor Héritier concludes that the use of subterfuge to reconcile unity with diversity and competition with co-operation is the greatest challenge facing European policy-making UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=54561 ER -