Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics

The vast majority of existing studies on bureaucratic representation focus on bureaucracies’ permanent and internal staff. Yet, the rising sophistication of modern democracies and the technocratization of political life are gradually inducing an increased reliance on external experts to assist in th...

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Main Authors: Jarle Trondal, Zuzana Murdoch, Benny Geys
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2015-03-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/65
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spelling doaj-1f7271f6214543fa806b64ca183002192020-11-24T22:58:12ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632015-03-0131263610.17645/pag.v3i1.65108Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in PoliticsJarle Trondal0Zuzana Murdoch1Benny Geys2Department of Political Science, University of Agder, Norway, and ARENA—Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo, NorwayDepartment of Political Science, University of Agder, Norway, and Organization and Governance Studies, University of Bremen, GermanyDepartment of Applied Economics, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium, and Norwegian Business School BI, NorwayThe vast majority of existing studies on bureaucratic representation focus on bureaucracies’ permanent and internal staff. Yet, the rising sophistication of modern democracies and the technocratization of political life are gradually inducing an increased reliance on external experts to assist in the development and implementation of policy decisions. This trend, we argue, raises the need to extend studies of bureaucratic representation to such external and non-permanent experts in governmental affairs. In this article, we take a first step in this direction using seconded national experts (SNEs) in the European Commission as our empirical laboratory. Our results highlight that Commission SNEs do not appear representative of their constituent population (i.e., the EU-27 population) along a number of socio-demographic dimensions. Moreover, we find that the role perception of “experts” is primarily explained by organizational affiliation, and only secondarily by demographic characteristics (except, of course, education).https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/65bureaucracyEuropean Commissionexpertiserepresentationseconded national experts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jarle Trondal
Zuzana Murdoch
Benny Geys
spellingShingle Jarle Trondal
Zuzana Murdoch
Benny Geys
Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
Politics and Governance
bureaucracy
European Commission
expertise
representation
seconded national experts
author_facet Jarle Trondal
Zuzana Murdoch
Benny Geys
author_sort Jarle Trondal
title Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
title_short Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
title_full Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
title_fullStr Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
title_full_unstemmed Representative Bureaucracy and the Role of Expertise in Politics
title_sort representative bureaucracy and the role of expertise in politics
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2015-03-01
description The vast majority of existing studies on bureaucratic representation focus on bureaucracies’ permanent and internal staff. Yet, the rising sophistication of modern democracies and the technocratization of political life are gradually inducing an increased reliance on external experts to assist in the development and implementation of policy decisions. This trend, we argue, raises the need to extend studies of bureaucratic representation to such external and non-permanent experts in governmental affairs. In this article, we take a first step in this direction using seconded national experts (SNEs) in the European Commission as our empirical laboratory. Our results highlight that Commission SNEs do not appear representative of their constituent population (i.e., the EU-27 population) along a number of socio-demographic dimensions. Moreover, we find that the role perception of “experts” is primarily explained by organizational affiliation, and only secondarily by demographic characteristics (except, of course, education).
topic bureaucracy
European Commission
expertise
representation
seconded national experts
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/65
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