| Author (Person) | Delreux, Tom |
|---|---|
| Series Title | Environmental Policy and Governance |
| Series Details | Vol.19, No 1, January-February 2009, p21-31 |
| Publication Date | January 2009 |
| ISSN | 1756-932X |
| Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
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Abstract: This article focuses on the way the European Union acted as a negotiating party during the international negotiations leading to the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (1998-2000). Starting from a principal-agent model, the article discusses how the EU participated in these negotiations and how the internal decision-making process developed. It argues that the EU was able to negotiate in a unified and influential way by defending a common position, which was expressed by a flexible negotiation arrangement, at the international level. Three features of the EU decision-making process engendered such a strong EU negotiation arrangement: homogeneous preferences among the actors in the EU, symmetrically distributed information among them and a cooperative and institutionally dense decision-making context. |
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| Source Link | Link to Main Source http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ |
| Subject Categories | Politics and International Relations |
| Countries / Regions | Europe |