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The politics of financial services regulation and supervision reform in the European Union
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 19:34 authored by Lucia QuagliaThe regulation and supervision of financial services in the European Union (EU) has undergone major reform between 1999 and 2004. This policy evolution is theoretically interesting, raising the question of which conceptual approaches better explain it, and it is also empirically relevant because it is an area of intense EU activity. This article provides a theoretically informed and empirically grounded explanation of the policy reform by evaluating the analytical leverage of three integration theories, mainly by relying on two methods process tracing and congruence procedure employing a variety of primary and secondary sources. It is argued that sequencing different theoretical approaches interdependence, supranational governance and liberal intergovernmentalism explains the various stages of the policy-making process namely, background-setting, agenda-setting and decision making, as well as the main features of the outcome.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
European Journal of Political ResearchISSN
0304-4130Publisher
Wiley-BlackwellExternal DOI
Issue
2Volume
46Page range
269-290Pages
22.0Department affiliated with
- Politics Publications
Notes
According to the ISI web of science, the EJPR is one of the very top journals in Political Science. This article provides a theoretically-informed and empirically-grounded explanation of the reform of financial services regulation and supervision in the European Union that took place between 1998 and 2005. Methodologically, it relies on process- tracing and congruence procedures, employing a variety of primary and secondary sources. It makes an important theoretical contribution to the literature on European integration and political science more generally, arguing that sequencing different theoretical approaches - interdependence, supranational governance and intergovernmentalism - explains the various stages of the policy making process, namely, background-setting, agenda-setting and decision-making. This is one of the very few articles written by political scientists on financial services regulation, and it is the very first one to analyse the so-called Lamfalussy reform in the EU. Although it was published recently it is already widely quoted in papers in the field, some of which are in the process of being published as journal articles or book chapters.Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes