Steering through Complexity: EU Environmental Regulation in the International Context

The nature of governance in the European Union (EU) and its member states is continuing to evolve as the EU develops. This paper focuses on the challenges to this governance process in the sector of environmental policy, and particularly the role of external organizations and states in providing alternate policy fora. The policy impact of these institutions and organizations leads to more actor participation in a way that EU players may not be able to anticipate or control since the EU is only one of several arenas involved. Both states and non-governmental actors actively seek to shift issues to arenas that provide them advantages. Consequently, developments in other arenas shape and are shaped by EU issues as actors pursue forum shopping. The paper presents two cases, the amendment of the Basel Convention to ban hazardous wastes export and the EU regulation of chemical risk, which demonstrate how external players can shape EU regulation.

[1]  Rachelle D. Hollander,et al.  Acceptable Evidence: Science and Values in Risk Management , 1994 .

[2]  Peter Stoett The Greening of Machiavelli: The evolution of international environmental politics , 1996 .

[3]  Brian Wynne,et al.  Risk Management and Hazardous Waste: Implementation and the Dialectics of Credibility , 1987 .

[4]  P. Seabright,et al.  Regulation in the European Community , 1989 .

[5]  P. Haas Obtaining International Environmental Protection through Epistemic Consensus , 1990 .

[6]  B. Kohler-Koch The Evolution and Transformation of European Governance , 1998 .

[7]  A. Zito Creating environmental policy in the European Union , 1999 .

[8]  G. Suter Uncertainty in Environmental Risk Assessment , 1990 .

[9]  Integrating Sweden into the European Union: Problems Concerning Chemicals Control , 1998 .

[10]  P. Haas,et al.  Learning to Learn: Improving International Governance , 1995 .

[11]  David L. Levy,et al.  Capital Contests: National and Transnational Channels of Corporate Influence on the Climate Change Negotiations , 1998 .

[12]  David G. Victor,et al.  The implementation and effectiveness of international environmental commitments : theory and practice , 1999 .

[13]  Geoffrey Dudley,et al.  Arenas without Rules and the Policy Change Process: Outsider Groups and British Roads Policy , 1998 .

[14]  R. Putnam Diplomacy and domestic politics: the logic of two-level games , 1988, International Organization.

[15]  R. Rhodes,et al.  The New Governance: Governing without Government , 1996 .

[16]  L. Hooghe,et al.  European integration from the 1980s: State-centric v. multi-level governance , 1996 .

[17]  A. Lenschow Variation in EC environmental policy integration: agency push within complex institutional structures , 1997 .

[18]  H. Somsen The European Union and the OECD , 1996 .

[19]  H. Milner,et al.  Internationalization and Domestic Politics: An Introduction , 1996 .

[20]  B. Kohler-Koch Catching up with change: The transformation of governance in the European Union , 1996 .

[21]  Brian R. Moyer The Politics of Chemical Risk: Scenarios for a Regulatory Future , 2000 .

[22]  Craig P. Warkentin,et al.  International Institutions, the State, and Global Civil Society in the Age of the World Wide Web , 2000, Understanding Global Cooperation.

[23]  R. Scheyvens The Third World in Global Environmental Politics , 1997 .

[24]  Peter M. Haas,et al.  Institutions for the Earth , 1993 .

[25]  A. Weale Environmental rules and rule‐making in the European Union , 1996 .

[26]  Brian Wynne,et al.  Risk Management and Hazardous Waste , 1987 .

[27]  A. Moravcsik A New Statecraft? Supranational Entrepreneurs and International Cooperation , 1999, International Organization.

[28]  B. Wynne,et al.  Building the European Union: science and the cultural dimensions of environmental policy. , 1996 .

[29]  E. Solem The Nordic Council and Scandinavian integration , 1977 .

[30]  K. Hanf,et al.  Domesticating International Commitments: Linking National and International Decision-Making , 1998 .

[31]  Giandomenico Majone,et al.  From the Positive to the Regulatory State: Causes and Consequences of Changes in the Mode of Governance , 1997, Journal of Public Policy.

[32]  J. A. G. Drake Chemical industry : friend to the environment , 1992 .

[33]  Rorden Wilkinson,et al.  Labor Standards and Global Governance: Examining the Dimensions of Institutional Engagement , 2000 .

[34]  S. Hoffmann Obstinate or Obsolete? The Fate of the Nation-State and the Case of Western Europe , 1998 .

[35]  Ewald Rametsteiner,et al.  Grounding international modes of governance into National Forest Programmes , 2002 .