In the year 2000, in Lisbon, the European Union launched an agenda for growth, jobs, sustainability and competiveness with a ten-year target. In 2010, the agenda was re-launched with different specific objectives but with the same final goals. Why do the European Union leaders engage with these ten-year plans? What exactly do they commit to when they do so? Do they learn from the results, or is this a rhetorical exercise that complex organizations need to raise attention to certain issues?
This volume is the first-ever systematic study of the Lisbon agenda of the European Union, now called Europe 2020. It explains the rise of the Lisbon agenda as governance architectures and examines its components across time and sectors.
This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.
This book analyses the institutional and administrative achievements of the Lisbon agenda, most ambitious plan of the European Union over the last ten years.
It was published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.
1. The Politics of Governance Architectures: Creation, Change and
Effects of the EU Lisbon Strategy Susana Borrás and Claudio M. Radaelli
2.
PrincipalAgent Theory and the Open Method of Co-ordination: The Case of the
European Employment Strategy Caroline de la Porte
3. From Harmonization to
Co-ordination? EU Law in the Lisbon Governance Architecture Stijn Smismans
4.
The Lisbon Strategys Empowerment of Core Executives: Centralizing and
Politicizing EU National Co-ordination Susana Borrás and B. Guy Peters
5. The
Europeanization of Flexicurity: The Lisbon Strategys Impact on Employment
Policies in Italy and Poland Anna Gwiazda
6. The Lisbon Strategy and the
Politicization of EU Policy-Making: The Case of the Services Directive Jeff
Loder
7. From Bologna to Lisbon: The Political Uses of the Lisbon Script in
European Higher Education Policy Giliberto Capano and Simona Piatton
Susana Borrás is Professor of Governance and Innovation, and head of the Department of Business and Politics, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark.
Claudio M. Radaelli is Professor of political science at the University of Exeter, where he directs the Centre for European Governance.