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Organised Civil Society and European Governance CIVGOV

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Countries covered: Italy, Belgium, Spain Basque Country, Spain Santiago, ... takes place in a variety of fora: green papers e white papers, consultation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Organised Civil Society and European Governance CIVGOV


1
Organised Civil Society and European
Governance(CIVGOV)
  • Coordinator Università di Trento -- Carlo Ruzza
  • Countries covered Italy, Belgium, Spain Basque
    Country, Spain Santiago, Germany, Greece,
    France, Sweden, the UK - Essex, the UK
    Stirling, Hungary, Poland.
  • European Institutions and Organised Civil Society

2
The structure of EU consultation
  • Consultation takes place in a variety of fora
    green papers e white papers, consultation reports
    and communication. The Better Lawmaking
    initiative is periodically reassessed to
    consider progress in including civil society.
  • In legal terms, a duty to consult is established
    in the Treaties, and ideal consulting principles
    have been codified as a duty to strive for wide
    participation, openness, accountability,
    effectiveness and coherence.
  • CONECCS includes over 700 organizations 200
    are public interest groups. Since 2005 rules for
    inclusion had been tightened to ensure a broader
    European base, openness, transparency and better
    ability to provide an input to the Commission.
  • Consultation should occurr in a broad, open,
    coherent, efficient and accountable manner. Key
    principles are transparency, representativeness,
    quality of information, and internal democracy.

3
Civil society in EU policy making
  • Calls for a deeper and clearer involvement of
    civil society are for instance reiterated in the
    White Paper on Governance for whose preparation
    a special group considered ways to better
    incorporate views from civil society and the
    Better Lawmaking initiative which is
    periodically reviewed to assess progress also in
    terms of the involvement of civil society.
  • The draft Constitutional Treaty advocates a
    participatory democracy
  • A better civil society involvement is now a
    policy priority reflected for instance in
    Commissions documents and the website

4
Environmentalism, Anti-racism, Regionalism
  • The environmental coalition operates in one of
    the most successful EU-level policy area in which
    it had a significant influence
  • With the Amsterdam Treaty a solid legal basis was
    provided to anti-racism by article 13. Since
    then, a set of initiatives has emerged at EU
    level
  • Since the seventies ethno-regionalist movements
    have re-emerged in Europe. The process of
    regionalisation under way in all the large
    member-states has given greater legitimacy to
    regionalism.

5
Civil Society, MACs and policy discourse
  • The three movement families attempt to exert
    influence in broad advocacy coalitions (MACs)
    that constitute the EU-level voice of organized
    civil society. They differ greatly in terms of
    policy impact.
  • Influence depends from multiple variables such as
    the type of legal base, structure of policy
    networks, interests mobilised, etc.
  • At EU level there is a need to use experts to
    technicalize conflicts and scientificize
    conflicts because often there is no easy use of
    majoritarian rules. Also information is difficult
    to gather given the scarcity of resources. As a
    consequence the inclusion of interest
    organizations has always been accepted and
    encouraged.

6
Convergence
  • both EU and OCS concur in stressing the
    importance of improving implementation of
    policies, improving policy knowledge with the
    help of OCS, emphasising the importance of
    horizontal diffusion of policies and the general
    importance of civil society.
  • Both kind of actors stress the information-providi
    ng, monitoring and ideational role of OCS, its
    contribution to policy deliberation, its
    connections with marginalised sectors of the EU
    population and its ability to represent them.
  • They also stress the communication potential of
    civil society and therefore its media impact, and
    its implications for the legitimation of policies
    in the public sphere. They reiterate the
    counterbalancing business dominance.

7
Common Codes
  • Even if there are internal differences, both EU
    and OCS concur in stressing the importance of
  • improving implementation of policies, improving
    knowledge with the help of OCS,
  • the importance of horizontal diffusion of
    policies and
  • the general importance of civil society

8
Frames Identified
  • OCS and EU frames

9
Common codes identified in all policy sectors
  • Priorities in all sectors

10
The meaning of civil society for Institutions
  • Institutions stress the information-providing
    role of OCS
  • Contribution to policy deliberation
  • Connections with marginalised sectors of the EU
    population and ability to represent them
  • Communication potential and implications for the
    implementation of policies
  • Counterbalancing business dominance
  • In brief support for both vertical and
    horizontal governance

11
The social contributions of OCS
  • Although secondary, among institutions an
    emphasis emerges on
  • gathering information and communicating with the
    public.
  • disseminate the awareness of desired lifestyles
    (such as environmental or non-discriminatory
    ones)
  • aggrieved citizens - such as local victims of
    pollution incidents
  • communicating with the public
  • influencing the media

12
The meaning of civil society for OCS
  • OCS shares the views of Institutions
  • In addition it demands greater accessibility
  • It criticises the Commission for insufficient
    attention and for being pro-business biased
  • It advocates a stronger state

13
OCS Concerns
  • Percentage of importance of civil society
    ,implementation horizontality Improve
    Knowledge frames in the three sectors

14
Different concerns
  • Democracy (7.1), the importance of civil society
    (11.0) and minority rights (8.6) and
    citizenship (3.8), - all political concerns -
    are almost exclusively stressed by OCS.
    Conversely, the economic dimension stressed by
    institutions emphasises development (16.8),
    implementation (11) and financial information
    (14.2)

15
A study of national civil societies perceived
openness EU level
16
Responsiveness by sectors / EU
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