000 01716naa a2200181uu 4500
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003 OSt
005 20190211173018.0
008 100622s2003 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aGUIRAUDON, Virginie
_941293
245 1 0 _aThe constitution of a european immigration policy domain :
_ba political sociology approach
260 _aOxfordshire :
_bRoutledge,
_cApril 2003
520 3 _aAt the 1999 Tampere summit, EU member states committed themselves to developing a comprehensive immigration and asylum policy. Although directives harmonizing border controls or anti-discrimination instruments have been adopted, it remains an incomplete and complex European policy area. This article seeks to explain the timing, form and content of this new domain. It combines the insights of March and Olsen's "garbage can' model with a sociological approach that emphasizes power competition among actors in the same field. Diverse actors have seized upon EU opportunities. Law and order officials in charge of migration control seeking to gain autonomy in intergovernmental settings linked their action to the single market and transnational crime. NGOs providing expertise to Commission units seeking competence in non-economic areas jumped on the "social exclusion' bandwagon by proposing anti-discrimination legislation. These developments - superimposed on policies regarding free movement of workers and services - are thus often contradictory and adhocratic.
773 0 8 _tJournal of European Public Policy
_g10, 2, p. 263-282
_dOxfordshire : Routledge, April 2003
_xISSN 13501763
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20100622
_b1133^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20100623
_b1707^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c34560
_d34560
041 _aeng