EoRPA logo
University of Strathclyde UnEPRC
  • About EoRPA
    Back

    About EoRPA

    • Members
    • People
  • Research Papers
    Back

    Research Papers

    • National Regional Policies in Europe
    • EU Competition policy and regional aid
    • EU Cohesion Policy
    • Thematic Papers
  • News & events
    Back

    News & events

    • News archive

    Conference ‘Regional policy in Scotland after Brexit’ – 7 February 2020,

    The 47th IQ-Net conference (Delft): Preparing for 2021-27 - Programming,

    TRACER: Research and Innovation project meeting on coal regions in transition

  • Contact us
  • Login
Login
  • Home
  • News & events
  • News archive
  • News archive
  • New publication: Administrative performance and capacity in Cohesion policy

New publication: Administrative performance and capacity in Cohesion policy

04 March 2013

A new article has been published by John Bachtler, Carlos Mendez and Hildegard Oraze assessing the role of administrative capacity in explaining the performance of eight Central and Eastern European countries in managing Cohesion policy over the 2004-2008 period.

Drawing on a conceptual framework from the Europeanization literature, it explores whether pre-accession administrative adjustment to comply with the 'acquis' continued in the post-accession period, against a backdrop of critical assessments about the state of administrative capacity for managing Cohesion policy.

The article concludes that administrative capacity was developed faster and more substantially than commentators predicted. The findings have implications for understanding the post-accession compliance record of the EU8, challenging the contention that they fall within a 'world of dead letters'. Administrative capacity has been underestimated and insufficient attention has been given to the dynamics of capacity evolution and learning.

The article has been published online by European Planning Studies with the title 'From Conditionality to Europeanization in Central and Eastern Europe: Administrative Performance and Capacity in Cohesion Policy'.

×
Share this article
  • Home
  • About EoRPA
  • Research papers
  • News & events
  • Contact us
  • Terms & conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Ethics & sustainability
  • Site map
  • Twitter

European Policies Research Centre

School of Government & Public Policy 
University of Strathclyde
40 George Street
Glasgow G1 1QE
United Kingdom
+44 (0) 141 548 4907
eprc@strath.ac.uk

© 2020 European Regional Policy Research Consortium