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‘Telling Stories about Politics’: Europeanization and the EU's Council Working Groups
Author(s) -
CLARK JULIAN,
JONES ALUN
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
jcms: journal of common market studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.54
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1468-5965
pISSN - 0021-9886
DOI - 10.1111/j.1468-5965.2010.02143.x
Subject(s) - institutionalism , scholarship , european union , historical institutionalism , politics , transformative learning , negotiation , internationalization , political science , discipline , variety (cybernetics) , new institutionalism , sociology , political economy , positive economics , public administration , social science , law , economics , international trade , pedagogy , artificial intelligence , computer science
Recent years have witnessed much debate on Europeanization. Scholarship from a variety of different disciplinary perspectives has been conducted on this topic using the analytical approaches of new institutionalism, including studies made of the interrelations between formal European Union (EU) institutional rules and procedures and informal norms and beliefs on individual actor behaviour. Yet using new institutionalism to examine Europeanization's interconnections with and effects upon the EU's distinctive model of internationalization is not without problems, as recent analyses confirm. Drawing on recent critiques of March and Olsen's logics of appropriateness and consequentiality that together provide the foundations of the new institutionalism, this article examines how political elites mediate Europeanization through their EU decision‐making and decision‐taking. Using interviews with United Kingdom (UK) negotiators centrally involved in EU trade, agriculture, environment and foreign policy, their personal ‘lived’ experiences of Europeanization are gauged. This empirical analysis shows that current understandings of March and Olsen's two logics do not adequately capture the juxtaposition of different behavioural reasoning and stances adopted by UK policy elites negotiating in the EU. In turn, the alleged transformative nature of Europeanization is questioned.

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