Published in
Journal of Common Market Studies (JCMS), 46(4), 2008, pp. 899-900The book represents a valuable contribution to the existing literature not only for the convincing leadership model developed in its pages but also for the choice of the case studies 'not limited to specific geographical areas' and for the analysis of the multiplicity of Member States' approaches, traditions and performance in developing countries. Furthermore, the book provides additional evidence that integration theories can be successfully used to explain the EU's external relations and that the logic of consequentialism and the logic of appropriateness coexist and are simultaneously at play in EU policy-making. It remains to be seen whether Carbone's leadership model might be applied to other (external) policy areas, such as trade or neighbourhood policies. For this reason, the book is highly recommended reading not only for scholars and practitioners interested in investigating and evaluating EU development policy but also for those interested in the international role of the EU.
Published in
Development and Change, 39(4), July 2008, pp. 706-708.Carbone aims to bridge two theoretical divides in EU studies: one between intergovernmental and supranational understandings of EU politics, and a second between rationalism and constructivism....
With The European Union and International Development, Maurizio Carbone has provided a very interesting analysis of development assistance at the EU level. The book clearly fills a gap in the literature on international development. By focusing on the role of the European Commission, and by formulating a set of conditions under which this central actor can provide leadership, Carbone has advanced theorizing on the EU, as well as international organizations in general. Carbone's study will prove to be of interest primarily to two audiences: those interested in decision making in the EU, and those interested in the 'politics of foreign aid'. By providing a set of testable assumptions on leadership in a supranational political framework, the study is particularly useful to researchers who wish to understand the role of 'political entrepreneurs'.
Published in
Choice Reviews Online, October 2008Traditionally, the intergovernmentalist, supranationalist, rationalist, and constructivist schools of thought dominate the study of politics in the EU. By developing an innovative leadership model, which emphasizes the roles of institutional entrepreneurs and internal fragmentation as well as the use of a repertoire of tactics by the European Commission, Carbone (University of Glasgow, UK) goes beyond these traditional approaches. Accordingly, he sets the stage for an innovative understanding of the radical and unexpected turns of the EU's integration of different development policies in recent years. The issues of volume of aid, the provision of Global Public Goods, and the untying of aid to the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) show that for the European Commission to emerge as an assertive policy maker the institutional entrepreneurs within a Directorate General (DG) must form a united front able to push certain issues on the policy agenda, minimize fragmentation within the European Commission, and engage in different modes of strategic behavior vis-A -vis the member states during policy initiation, formulation, and adoption phases. As illustrated by the policy cases, the central variable to explain the European Commission's ability to decisively shape policies depends on the degree of unity within it. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers, upper-division undergraduate students, and up
Published in Journal of Common Market Studies (JCMS), 46(4), 2008, pp. 899-900
The book represents a valuable contribution to the existing literature not only for the convincing leadership model developed in its pages but also for the choice of the case studies 'not limited to specific geographical areas' and for the analysis of the multiplicity of Member States' approaches, traditions and performance in developing countries. Furthermore, the book provides additional evidence that integration theories can be successfully used to explain the EU's external relations and that the logic of consequentialism and the logic of appropriateness coexist and are simultaneously at play in EU policy-making. It remains to be seen whether Carbone's leadership model might be applied to other (external) policy areas, such as trade or neighbourhood policies. For this reason, the book is highly recommended reading not only for scholars and practitioners interested in investigating and evaluating EU development policy but also for those interested in the international role of the EU.
Published in
Development and Change, 39(4), July 2008, pp. 706-708.Carbone aims to bridge two theoretical divides in EU studies: one between intergovernmental and supranational understandings of EU politics, and a second between rationalism and constructivism....
With The European Union and International Development, Maurizio Carbone has provided a very interesting analysis of development assistance at the EU level. The book clearly fills a gap in the literature on international development. By focusing on the role of the European Commission, and by formulating a set of conditions under which this central actor can provide leadership, Carbone has advanced theorizing on the EU, as well as international organizations in general. Carbone's study will prove to be of interest primarily to two audiences: those interested in decision making in the EU, and those interested in the 'politics of foreign aid'. By providing a set of testable assumptions on leadership in a supranational political framework, the study is particularly useful to researchers who wish to understand the role of 'political entrepreneurs'.
Published in
Choice Reviews Online, October 2008Traditionally, the intergovernmentalist, supranationalist, rationalist, and constructivist schools of thought dominate the study of politics in the EU. By developing an innovative leadership model, which emphasizes the roles of institutional entrepreneurs and internal fragmentation as well as the use of a repertoire of tactics by the European Commission, Carbone (University of Glasgow, UK) goes beyond these traditional approaches. Accordingly, he sets the stage for an innovative understanding of the radical and unexpected turns of the EU's integration of different development policies in recent years. The issues of volume of aid, the provision of Global Public Goods, and the untying of aid to the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) show that for the European Commission to emerge as an assertive policy maker the institutional entrepreneurs within a Directorate General (DG) must form a united front able to push certain issues on the policy agenda, minimize fragmentation within the European Commission, and engage in different modes of strategic behavior vis-A -vis the member states during policy initiation, formulation, and adoption phases. As illustrated by the policy cases, the central variable to explain the European Commission's ability to decisively shape policies depends on the degree of unity within it. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers, upper-division undergraduate students, and up