Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making

The European Commission has faced increasing criticism that its use of expertise in policy-making is undemocratic and politicized. In response to critics, the Commission has produced a number of publicly available documents where its expert policies and practices are outlined and discussed. Cynics v...

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Main Authors: Cathrine Holst, John R. Moodie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2015-03-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/240
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spelling doaj-4411cbc3602b482ab36d3ec7eeca28762020-11-24T21:10:47ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632015-03-0131374810.17645/pag.v3i1.240109Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-MakingCathrine Holst0John R. Moodie1ARENA—Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo, NorwayARENA—Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo, NorwayThe European Commission has faced increasing criticism that its use of expertise in policy-making is undemocratic and politicized. In response to critics, the Commission has produced a number of publicly available documents where its expert policies and practices are outlined and discussed. Cynics view public communications of this nature with skepticism, as organizations tend to adopt “smooth talk” and cosmetic rhetoric designed to placate critics and create a façade of compliance aimed at decreasing external pressure. An alternative deliberative approach, would expect the Commission to engage in a relatively open, reflective and reason-based interchange. The article’s main aim is to assess the relative merits of these two approaches in capturing the Commission’s framing of its public communication. Cynical expectations, prevalent among Commission critics, are confirmed by the Commission’s silence on unpleasant topics including the undemocratic nature of existing expertise arrangements and the strategic uses of knowledge in EU policy-making. However, firm regulatory initiatives and the Commission’s critical engagement with democratization demands and possible goal conflicts within their critics’ agenda give significant leverage to a deliberative approach.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/240deliberative democracyEuropean Commissionexpertiseknowledge utilizationorganized hypocracypublic communication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cathrine Holst
John R. Moodie
spellingShingle Cathrine Holst
John R. Moodie
Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
Politics and Governance
deliberative democracy
European Commission
expertise
knowledge utilization
organized hypocracy
public communication
author_facet Cathrine Holst
John R. Moodie
author_sort Cathrine Holst
title Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
title_short Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
title_full Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
title_fullStr Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
title_full_unstemmed Cynical or Deliberative? An Analysis of the European Commission’s Public Communication on Its Use of Expertise in Policy-Making
title_sort cynical or deliberative? an analysis of the european commission’s public communication on its use of expertise in policy-making
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2015-03-01
description The European Commission has faced increasing criticism that its use of expertise in policy-making is undemocratic and politicized. In response to critics, the Commission has produced a number of publicly available documents where its expert policies and practices are outlined and discussed. Cynics view public communications of this nature with skepticism, as organizations tend to adopt “smooth talk” and cosmetic rhetoric designed to placate critics and create a façade of compliance aimed at decreasing external pressure. An alternative deliberative approach, would expect the Commission to engage in a relatively open, reflective and reason-based interchange. The article’s main aim is to assess the relative merits of these two approaches in capturing the Commission’s framing of its public communication. Cynical expectations, prevalent among Commission critics, are confirmed by the Commission’s silence on unpleasant topics including the undemocratic nature of existing expertise arrangements and the strategic uses of knowledge in EU policy-making. However, firm regulatory initiatives and the Commission’s critical engagement with democratization demands and possible goal conflicts within their critics’ agenda give significant leverage to a deliberative approach.
topic deliberative democracy
European Commission
expertise
knowledge utilization
organized hypocracy
public communication
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/240
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AT johnrmoodie cynicalordeliberativeananalysisoftheeuropeancommissionspubliccommunicationonitsuseofexpertiseinpolicymaking
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