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Politicization within the European Commission bureaucracy

By: Bauer, Michael W.
Contributor(s): Ege, Jorn.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2012Description: p.403-424.Subject(s): Bureaucracy | Administrative reform | European Union In: International Review of Administrative SciencesSummary: Against a background of institutional change and organizational reform, we analyze the politicization of the European Commissionメs bureaucracy. Politicization can generally be defined as the substitution of bureaucratic neutrality by introducing political considerations into the human resource management and behaviour of civil servants. The concepts of direct and professional politicization serve as vantage points for our analysis. The empirical data are taken from documentary analysis and recent online and semi-structured surveys of Commission officials. We show that Commission bureaucrats, although they are highly sensitive to the political side of their job, are less politicized since the Kinnock reforms than before. While the College of the Commission seems to have indeed become more politically responsive to its supranational peers and national governments, the Commissionメs bureaucracy can be characterized as weakly politicized or, according to current debates, as quite instrumental in a Neo-Weberian sense. - Reprodu
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 78, Issue no: 3 Available AR98113

Against a background of institutional change and organizational reform, we analyze the politicization of the European Commissionメs bureaucracy. Politicization can generally be defined as the substitution of bureaucratic neutrality by introducing political considerations into the human resource management and behaviour of civil servants. The concepts of direct and professional politicization serve as vantage points for our analysis. The empirical data are taken from documentary analysis and recent online and semi-structured surveys of Commission officials. We show that Commission bureaucrats, although they are highly sensitive to the political side of their job, are less politicized since the Kinnock reforms than before. While the College of the Commission seems to have indeed become more politically responsive to its supranational peers and national governments, the Commissionメs bureaucracy can be characterized as weakly politicized or, according to current debates, as quite instrumental in a Neo-Weberian sense. - Reprodu

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