Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies

Expertise and autonomy are cornerstones to the effective operation and legitimacy of European Regulatory Agencies (ERAs). Yet, we know little about ERAs’ actual autonomy, nor about factors shaping it. This article studies ERAs’ actual autonomy from public and private actors, emphasising two crucial...

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Main Author: Christoph Ossege
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2015-03-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/75
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spelling doaj-3ddf21808619434c8c3c07eb9e52988e2020-11-24T21:10:47ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632015-03-013110111310.17645/pag.v3i1.75114Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory AgenciesChristoph Ossege0SSM Policy & Coordination Unit, Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, Germany, and Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS), Bremen University, GermanyExpertise and autonomy are cornerstones to the effective operation and legitimacy of European Regulatory Agencies (ERAs). Yet, we know little about ERAs’ actual autonomy, nor about factors shaping it. This article studies ERAs’ actual autonomy from public and private actors, emphasising two crucial explanatory factors: expertise and rulemaking competences. The lack of insights on expertise is particularly striking, as expertise—the “raison d’être” and main resource of expert bodies—provides ERAs with a potentially powerful means to increase autonomy. Relying on a rational institutionalist framework within which ERAs enjoy substantive discretion to pursue their goals, the study empirically compares three powerful ERAs—the European Medicines Agency, the European Chemicals Agency, and the European Food Safety Authority. Based on the analysis of 39 semi-structured expert interviews, findings show that expertise is a crucial explanation for ERAs’ substantive autonomy from the Commission. Towards research intensive private stakeholders, the role of expertise becomes less pronounced. Instead, ERAs are more successful in protecting their autonomy by engaging in the risk-averse interpretation of the regulatory framework and by adapting rules over time to adapt their needs: they engage in “procedural insulation”. Political salience provides a scope condition for ERAs to use expert knowledge and rulemaking competences more strategically—potentially undermining scientific quality.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/75autonomydelegationEU agenciesEU governanceexpert adviceexpertiseinsulationregulationrulemaking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christoph Ossege
spellingShingle Christoph Ossege
Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
Politics and Governance
autonomy
delegation
EU agencies
EU governance
expert advice
expertise
insulation
regulation
rulemaking
author_facet Christoph Ossege
author_sort Christoph Ossege
title Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
title_short Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
title_full Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
title_fullStr Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
title_full_unstemmed Driven by Expertise and Insulation? The Autonomy of European Regulatory Agencies
title_sort driven by expertise and insulation? the autonomy of european regulatory agencies
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2015-03-01
description Expertise and autonomy are cornerstones to the effective operation and legitimacy of European Regulatory Agencies (ERAs). Yet, we know little about ERAs’ actual autonomy, nor about factors shaping it. This article studies ERAs’ actual autonomy from public and private actors, emphasising two crucial explanatory factors: expertise and rulemaking competences. The lack of insights on expertise is particularly striking, as expertise—the “raison d’être” and main resource of expert bodies—provides ERAs with a potentially powerful means to increase autonomy. Relying on a rational institutionalist framework within which ERAs enjoy substantive discretion to pursue their goals, the study empirically compares three powerful ERAs—the European Medicines Agency, the European Chemicals Agency, and the European Food Safety Authority. Based on the analysis of 39 semi-structured expert interviews, findings show that expertise is a crucial explanation for ERAs’ substantive autonomy from the Commission. Towards research intensive private stakeholders, the role of expertise becomes less pronounced. Instead, ERAs are more successful in protecting their autonomy by engaging in the risk-averse interpretation of the regulatory framework and by adapting rules over time to adapt their needs: they engage in “procedural insulation”. Political salience provides a scope condition for ERAs to use expert knowledge and rulemaking competences more strategically—potentially undermining scientific quality.
topic autonomy
delegation
EU agencies
EU governance
expert advice
expertise
insulation
regulation
rulemaking
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/75
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