Europeanization, whitehall culture and the treasury as institutional veto player : a constructivist approach to economic and monetary union
By: DYSON, Kenneth.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: R.W.A.Rhodes, 2000Public Administration: an international quarterly 78, 4, p. 897-914Abstract: This article examines Europeanization in Whitelhall, using EMU as a case study. It argues that how the EMU policy comunity has developed within Whitehall, and its outcomes, cannot be captured using a narrow, rationalist game-theoretic framework. Although strategic behaviour is important, as Dyson and Featherstone (1999)argue, the primary question is how Whitehall players have defined British interests, formed a collective identity and given a specific meaning to the EMU game. The article applies a cultural approach to Whitehall, focusing on the macro structures of belief within wich EMU policy is madeItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
This article examines Europeanization in Whitelhall, using EMU as a case study. It argues that how the EMU policy comunity has developed within Whitehall, and its outcomes, cannot be captured using a narrow, rationalist game-theoretic framework. Although strategic behaviour is important, as Dyson and Featherstone (1999)argue, the primary question is how Whitehall players have defined British interests, formed a collective identity and given a specific meaning to the EMU game. The article applies a cultural approach to Whitehall, focusing on the macro structures of belief within wich EMU policy is made
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