Moving beyond (non-)compliance: the customization of European Union policies in 27 countries
Thomann, E; Zhelyazkova, A
Date: 2 August 2017
Journal
Journal of European Public Policy
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Europeanization research often neglects that the implementation of European Union (EU)
policy results in diverse national outcomes, even if member states comply with EU law. Such
fine-grained Europeanization patterns have been explored as `gold-plating’ and
‘customization’. This paper builds and expands on this research to propose ...
Europeanization research often neglects that the implementation of European Union (EU)
policy results in diverse national outcomes, even if member states comply with EU law. Such
fine-grained Europeanization patterns have been explored as `gold-plating’ and
‘customization’. This paper builds and expands on this research to propose a general
conceptualization and measurement of customization as the changes that provisions of EU
Directives undergo in their regulatory density and restrictiveness during legal transposition.
Using unique data on the customization of EU Directive provisions from two policy areas in
27 countries, our empirical analysis reveals distinct changes in density and restrictiveness,
pronounced policy-specific and state-level customization patterns. The findings illustrate how
national customization strategies often follow specific EU regulatory logics in different
integration contexts. We outline implications for future research on the causes and
consequences of the inherent diversity of EU implementation regarding dimensions of
customization, issues of legitimacy and effectiveness.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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