From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets

This article analyses the transformation of European commissioners’ private offices (cabinets) from national enclaves to supporting offices. Structural changes were caused by a reform by then-Commission President Prodi in 1999. To analyse this reform, a typology based on management literature is dev...

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Main Author: Renke Deckarm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2016-08-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/724
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spelling doaj-6002b20465624ad883c05c92bff3ce9f2020-11-25T03:59:56ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2016-08-01123From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ CabinetsRenke Deckarm0Oldenburg UniversityThis article analyses the transformation of European commissioners’ private offices (cabinets) from national enclaves to supporting offices. Structural changes were caused by a reform by then-Commission President Prodi in 1999. To analyse this reform, a typology based on management literature is developed. The reform is characterised as ‘big bang’: it was strategically planned by a leader, transformational and affected the entire cabinet system. The most important measures were that at least three nationalities and three Commission officials were required in cabinets. These and other measures anticipated changing demands towards cabinets caused by the 2004/7 enlargement and the Kinnock reforms. This article closes a gap in research on the Commission, in which cabinets are seldom analysed in their own right. It complements earlier evidence on change in cabinets by explaining why and how structural changes evoked a functional transformation. This contributes to the broader research agenda on change in the functioning of the Commission. Content analysis of primary sources (Prodi’s speeches and publications, expert interviews and a biographic database) and recent academic publications contribute to the analysis. https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/724European CommissionOrganisational ChangeReformCabinetsKinnock ReformsEnlargement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renke Deckarm
spellingShingle Renke Deckarm
From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
Journal of Contemporary European Research
European Commission
Organisational Change
Reform
Cabinets
Kinnock Reforms
Enlargement
author_facet Renke Deckarm
author_sort Renke Deckarm
title From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
title_short From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
title_full From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
title_fullStr From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
title_full_unstemmed From National Enclaves to Supporting Offices: an Analysis of the 1999 Reform of European Commissioners’ Cabinets
title_sort from national enclaves to supporting offices: an analysis of the 1999 reform of european commissioners’ cabinets
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2016-08-01
description This article analyses the transformation of European commissioners’ private offices (cabinets) from national enclaves to supporting offices. Structural changes were caused by a reform by then-Commission President Prodi in 1999. To analyse this reform, a typology based on management literature is developed. The reform is characterised as ‘big bang’: it was strategically planned by a leader, transformational and affected the entire cabinet system. The most important measures were that at least three nationalities and three Commission officials were required in cabinets. These and other measures anticipated changing demands towards cabinets caused by the 2004/7 enlargement and the Kinnock reforms. This article closes a gap in research on the Commission, in which cabinets are seldom analysed in their own right. It complements earlier evidence on change in cabinets by explaining why and how structural changes evoked a functional transformation. This contributes to the broader research agenda on change in the functioning of the Commission. Content analysis of primary sources (Prodi’s speeches and publications, expert interviews and a biographic database) and recent academic publications contribute to the analysis.
topic European Commission
Organisational Change
Reform
Cabinets
Kinnock Reforms
Enlargement
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/724
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