Bulletin n. 1/2015
June 2015
CONTENTS
  • Section A) The theory and practise of the federal states and multi-level systems of government
  • Section B) Global governance and international organizations
  • Section C) Regional integration processes
  • Section D) Federalism as a political idea
  • Chatzopoulou Sevasti,
    Unpacking the Mechanisms of the EU ‘Throughput’ Governance Legitimacy: The Case of EFSA
    in Perspectives on European Politics and Society , vol. 16, n. 2 ,  2015 ,  159-177
    The proliferation of European Union (EU) agencies, referred to as agencification phenomenon, constitutes a significant EU institutional innovation. Agencification aimed to provide information, promote efficiency, decrease politicisation and generate standards based on specialised technical knowledge. However, the expanded role of EU agencies in regulatory policy-making has raised legitimacy questions, particularly in times of crisis and scandals. The legitimacy of agencies has been extensively studied with regard to input, and output (efficiency) legitimacy criteria. Instead, drawing on Schmidt's (2013) work this article claims that in order to assess the overall legitimacy of the EU regulatory governance through agencies, the ‘throughput’ criterion needs to be considered. Although important, the ‘input’ (politics) and ‘output’ (policy) criteria fail to capture what happens within the actual governance (process), between the decisions and the outcomes. Examples from the EU food regulatory governance through the European Food Safety Authority, a particularly technical and scientific policy area, illustrate how the ‘throughput’ mechanisms operate. While the absence of one of the throughput mechanisms delegitimises the regulatory governance of food, their simultaneous presence contributes to overall legitimacy of governance.
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