Epistemic Communities and Two Goals of Delegation: Hormone Growth Promoters in the European Union
Dunlop, Claire A.
Date: 1 April 2010
Journal
Science and Public Policy
Publisher
Beech Tree Publishing
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
The delegation literature tells us that decision-makers delegate power to agents to achieve efficiency or
credibility (or both). Critically, however, the successful delivery of each of these implies very different
levels of control over their agent by the principal. This paper deploys principal–agent modelling to
explore how this ...
The delegation literature tells us that decision-makers delegate power to agents to achieve efficiency or
credibility (or both). Critically, however, the successful delivery of each of these implies very different
levels of control over their agent by the principal. This paper deploys principal–agent modelling to
explore how this logic works with epistemic agents. It explores the implications of two epistemic
community’s contrasting de facto independence from European Commission decision-makers for the
delegation goals satisfied in formulating policy on hormone growth promoters. Analysis supported the
view that to deliver policy efficiency an epistemic community must have low autonomy from the
political principal. Policy credibility was achieved when decision-makers selected an epistemic
community whose views were socially legitimate.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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