L'interrégulation dans le contexte de l'intégration européenne et de la mondialisation
By: ZILLER, Jacques.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Paris : ENA, 2004Revue Française D'Administration Publique 109, p. 17-22Abstract: No sector today depends on a single level of decision-making : the end of former monopolies, geographic extension and the de-specialisation of economic activities have greatly increased the number of competent public authorities: local, regional, national, European, worldwide. Former modes of regulation have become obsolete, and in the past few years a true interregulation has empirically emerged to integrate this complexification. Described as intersectorial or multi-leveled, such interregulation poses a problem of coordination of competencies among regulators ; and although such coordination is a determining factor in Community organisation, it is particularly difficult to put in place in the European contextNo sector today depends on a single level of decision-making : the end of former monopolies, geographic extension and the de-specialisation of economic activities have greatly increased the number of competent public authorities: local, regional, national, European, worldwide. Former modes of regulation have become obsolete, and in the past few years a true interregulation has empirically emerged to integrate this complexification. Described as intersectorial or multi-leveled, such interregulation poses a problem of coordination of competencies among regulators ; and although such coordination is a determining factor in Community organisation, it is particularly difficult to put in place in the European context
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