ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Regulatory governance and its legitimacy problem (II): making and unmaking of regulatory institutions

Governance
Government
Institutions
Public Administration
Public Policy
Regulation
Climate Change
Energy Policy
P386
Takuya Onoda
Sciences Po Paris
Jose Maria Valenzuela
University of Oxford
Jose Maria Valenzuela
University of Oxford

Abstract

To what extent and how does regulatory governance stay legitimate amid changing technological, economic, and political circumstances, the rise of populism and democratic backsliding, and scepticisms over established experts and expertise? Our two panels bring together scholars interested in the interactions between regulatory politics and democratic politics. The first panel looks at the role of technical expertise – a quality that has often been considered central to the legitimacy of the regulatory state – as well as other qualities such as accountability, procedural fairness, and stakeholder engagement of regulatory agencies in tackling politicisation and populist challenges. The second panel examines how the role of the regulator and the instruments of governance are undermined or redefined as response to political and technological changes.

Title Details
Technical Legitimacy View Paper Details
The Constitutionally Politicized Regulatory Governance: An Aborted Independence in Iran View Paper Details
Electricity knows no borders, but states do: How unregulated interconnection is reversing cross-border grid integration View Paper Details
Planning and the regulatory state: decarbonisation of electricity and the new tools of regulated anticipation View Paper Details
From liberalization to interventionism: Policy paradigm change in EU digital and energy infrastructure policies View Paper Details