Protecting biodiversity in the European Union: national barriers and European opportunities
Publication date
18/03/2009Keyword
Biodiversity policyEnvironmental groups
European Union
Liberal intergovernmentalism
Multi-level governance
Peer-Reviewed
YesOpen Access status
closedAccess
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The European Union (EU) is an evolving system of multi-level governance (MLG). For scholars of the EU, a critical question is which level of governance has the most decisive influence on the integration process? Some studies of EU regional policy claim that subnational actors, using channels of interest representation that bypass national officials, interact directly with EU policy-makers generating outcomes that are neither desired nor intended by national executives. This article examines the development of EU biodiversity policy over a thirty-year period (c. 1970-2000) and finds that environmental groups, who were generally marginalized at the national level in Britain, have learnt to use EU opportunities to outflank the government, resulting in policy outcomes that they would be unlikely to secure through national channels of representation. However, the evidence presented suggests that supranational actors were the major cause of these unintended consequences, not environmental groups.Version
No full-text in the repositoryCitation
Fairbrass, J. and Jordan, A. (2001). Protecting biodiversity in the European Union: national barriers and European opportunities? Journal of European public policy. Vol. 8, No. 4, pp. 499-518.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.1080/13501760110064366Type
Articleae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1080/13501760110064366