Europe’s executive in stormy weather

Bart Joachim Bes, former guest researcher at ARENA, has published an article in Comparative European Politics on the effect of politicization on European Commission officials’ attitudes.

Abstract

The politicization of the European Union has elicited a variety of views on the European polity. Public scepticism is often directed at the European Commission which is accused of being an unresponsive and illegitimate bureaucracy. How does politicization affect the institutional role conceptions of Commission officials? By building on the literature of politicization and norm-guided open system approaches, I develop theoretical propositions on how politicization may affect the institutional role conceptions of Commission officials. Grounded on the proposition that Commission officials are most likely to respond to politicization in their home country, an exploratory case study of Dutch officials (21 in-depth interviews) was performed to flesh out the mechanisms at play. The findings tentatively reveal that, in varying degrees, most officials respond to politicization by adapting their institutional role conception into a more pragmatic direction, in which subsidiarity or legitimacy concerns are central.

Full info

Bart Joachim Bes
Europe’s executive in stormy weather: How does politicization affect commission officials’ attitudes?

Comparative European Politics, 2016, vol. 15(4), pp. 533-556.

DOI: 10.1057/s41295-016-0003-8

Published July 8, 2016 12:36 PM - Last modified Feb. 1, 2022 2:37 AM