Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP

The politicization of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) has manifested itself to different extents across EU Member States. In some countries, conflicting interpretations about the deal were highly visible in public and political debates, while in others there was hardly any...

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Main Author: Niels Gheyle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-03-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2588
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spelling doaj-d1b3b685255849b18bea19ddc8ed53ad2020-11-25T02:21:02ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632020-03-018130131110.17645/pag.v8i1.25881382Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIPNiels Gheyle0Department of Political Science, Ghent University, BelgiumThe politicization of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) has manifested itself to different extents across EU Member States. In some countries, conflicting interpretations about the deal were highly visible in public and political debates, while in others there was hardly any awareness. To further understand this phenomenon, trade scholars have to date not yet deepened nor leveraged the insights of the ‘differentiated politicization’ and social movement literature, which both point to coalition formation as an important trigger of politicization processes. This article contributes to our understanding of variation in politicization across EU Member States, by exploring coalition formation dynamics in differentiated politicization processes, in order to identify the factors facilitating successful domestic coalition formation. Through an exploratory case study design, I focus on three countries that exemplify high, middle, and low politicization cases: Germany, Belgium, and Ireland. By relying on the testimonies of campaigners active during the TTIP episode, I identify three elements that facilitated the formation of a diverse domestic coalition, which subsequently played an important role in pushing for a broad-based debate about the implications of TTIP: (i) an expert ‘mesomobilization’ link with a transnational advocacy network, (ii) the prior availability of domestic alliances, and (iii) an inclusive framing approach in order to establish a diverse coalition. The findings also underline the importance of timing in the unfolding of (successful) politicization processes.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2588alliancescoalition formationcontestationeuropean unionnetworkspoliticizationtradetransatlantic trade and investment partnership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niels Gheyle
spellingShingle Niels Gheyle
Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
Politics and Governance
alliances
coalition formation
contestation
european union
networks
politicization
trade
transatlantic trade and investment partnership
author_facet Niels Gheyle
author_sort Niels Gheyle
title Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
title_short Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
title_full Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
title_fullStr Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
title_full_unstemmed Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
title_sort huddle up! exploring domestic coalition formation dynamics in the differentiated politicization of ttip
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2020-03-01
description The politicization of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) has manifested itself to different extents across EU Member States. In some countries, conflicting interpretations about the deal were highly visible in public and political debates, while in others there was hardly any awareness. To further understand this phenomenon, trade scholars have to date not yet deepened nor leveraged the insights of the ‘differentiated politicization’ and social movement literature, which both point to coalition formation as an important trigger of politicization processes. This article contributes to our understanding of variation in politicization across EU Member States, by exploring coalition formation dynamics in differentiated politicization processes, in order to identify the factors facilitating successful domestic coalition formation. Through an exploratory case study design, I focus on three countries that exemplify high, middle, and low politicization cases: Germany, Belgium, and Ireland. By relying on the testimonies of campaigners active during the TTIP episode, I identify three elements that facilitated the formation of a diverse domestic coalition, which subsequently played an important role in pushing for a broad-based debate about the implications of TTIP: (i) an expert ‘mesomobilization’ link with a transnational advocacy network, (ii) the prior availability of domestic alliances, and (iii) an inclusive framing approach in order to establish a diverse coalition. The findings also underline the importance of timing in the unfolding of (successful) politicization processes.
topic alliances
coalition formation
contestation
european union
networks
politicization
trade
transatlantic trade and investment partnership
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2588
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