The Europeanization of Domestic Legislatures The Empirical Implicati
In ten years 80 per cent of the legislation related to economics, maybe also to taxes and social aff airs, will be of Community origin.” This declaration has been largely quoted, paraphrased and deformed by different authors, creating a persistent myth ac
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Series Editor Randall G. Holcombe Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, USA Founding Editor Gordon Tullock George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA
For further volumes: http://www.springer.com/series/6550
Sylvain Brouard Editors
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Olivier Costa
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Thomas Ko¨nig
The Europeanization of Domestic Legislatures The Empirical Implications of the Delors’ Myth in Nine Countries
Editors Sylvain Brouard Centre Emile Durkheim 33607 Pessac Cedex France [email protected]
Olivier Costa Centre Emile Durkheim 33607 Pessac Cedex France [email protected]
Thomas Ko¨nig Department of Political Science University of Mannheim Mannheim Germany [email protected]
ISSN 0924-4700 ISBN 978-1-4614-1501-5 e-ISBN 978-1-4614-1502-2 DOI 10.1007/978-1-4614-1502-2 Springer New York Dordrecht Heidelberg London Library of Congress Control Number: 2011941804 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012
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Acknowledgments
The “Delors’ myth project” is the result of four workshops organised in Bordeaux (November 2008), The Hague (June 2009), Barcelona (January 2010) and Mannheim (May 2010). The editors would like to thank Sciences Po Bordeaux (Centre Emile Durkheim), the Montesquieu Institute, the University of Barcelona and the Mannheim Center for European Social Research (MZES) at the University of Mannheim for their support. The editors would also like to acknowledge the Comparative Agendas Project, its initiators and its members. This research would have been much more difficult to achieve without this network as well as its common framework and focus. The research on the Austrian case was funded by the Austrian “New Orientations for Democracy in Europe” (NODE) research programme. The authors are grateful to Ilse Ko¨nig and Martina Hartl of the NODE programme for their support, to their student research assistants in Mannheim and Vienna for devoted work. The French chapter is a joint output of the project “LEGIPAR: Parliamentary legitimization and democratic government in France and in the European Union” and of the project “AGENDA: the political agendas of the Fifth Republic”, both funded by the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche. The German chapter is grateful for support of
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