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Regine Paul | Harvard University - Academia.edu

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Bielefeld","link_domain":"www.uni-bielefeld.de","icon":"//www.google.com/s2/u/0/favicons?domain=www.uni-bielefeld.de"}]</script><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" data-rails-context="{&quot;inMailer&quot;:false,&quot;i18nLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;i18nDefaultLocale&quot;:&quot;en&quot;,&quot;href&quot;:&quot;https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul&quot;,&quot;location&quot;:&quot;/ReginePaul&quot;,&quot;scheme&quot;:&quot;https&quot;,&quot;host&quot;:&quot;harvard.academia.edu&quot;,&quot;port&quot;:null,&quot;pathname&quot;:&quot;/ReginePaul&quot;,&quot;search&quot;:null,&quot;httpAcceptLanguage&quot;:null,&quot;serverSide&quot;:false}"></div> <div class="js-react-on-rails-component" style="display:none" data-component-name="ProfileCheckPaperUpdate" data-props="{}" data-trace="false" data-dom-id="ProfileCheckPaperUpdate-react-component-33e51c0f-df60-4e05-937e-195dee8bff10"></div> <div 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href="https://harvard.academia.edu/">Harvard University</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/Departments/Minda_de_Gunzburg_Center_for_European_Studies/Documents">Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Post-Doc</span></div><div><a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://uni-bielefeld.academia.edu/">Universität Bielefeld</a>, <a class="u-tcGrayDarker" href="https://uni-bielefeld.academia.edu/Departments/Fakult%C3%A4t_f%C3%BCr_Soziologie/Documents">Fakultät für Soziologie</a>, <span class="u-tcGrayDarker">Post-Doc</span></div></div></div></div><div class="sidebar-cta-container"><button class="ds2-5-button hidden profile-cta-button grow js-profile-follow-button" data-broccoli-component="user-info.follow-button" data-click-track="profile-user-info-follow-button" data-follow-user-fname="Regine" data-follow-user-id="1245262" data-follow-user-source="profile_button" data-has-google="false"><span 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class="label">Co-authors</p><p class="data">7</p></div></a><span><div class="stat-container"><p class="label"><span class="js-profile-total-view-text">Public Views</span></p><p class="data"><span class="js-profile-view-count"></span></p></div></span></div><div class="user-bio-container"><div class="profile-bio fake-truncate js-profile-about" style="margin: 0px;">I am currently a J.F. Kennedy Memorial Fellow at the Center for European Studies at Harvard, where I am writing my second monograph &quot;Empowered by risk? The comparative politics of introducing risk analysis in Germany&quot;.<br />This draws on my previous post-doc in a larger DFG/ORA project &quot;How States account for failure in Europe&quot; (HowSAFE) at the Law &amp; Society Unit of the University of Bielefeld. We examined the impact of policy traditions, constitutional norms and institutional structures on the turn to risk-based governance approaches across policy domains and countries together with colleagues in Bielefeld, London, Paris and Maastricht. <br /><br />My research interests cover critical political economy, comparative policy analysis, and public policy governance in the European Union and member states. My empirical work has focused on migration and mobility policies, border control, and risk regulation, with a special focus on occupational health and safety, food safety and flood protection.<br /><br />I am a co-chair of the research network &#39;European Integration and the Global Political Economy&#39; at the Council for European Studies.<br /><br />I have taught courses on political economy, risk regulation, comparative European social policy, qualitative methods, comparative research methods, and introductory units to political sciences and policy analysis.<br /><br />My dissertation (University of Bath) is published with Berghahn Books under the title &quot;The Political Economy of Border-Drawing: Arranging Legality in European Labor Migration Policies&quot;.<br /><span class="u-fw700">Supervisors:&nbsp;</span>Dr. Emma Carmel and Prof. Dr. Michael Huber<br /><b>Address:&nbsp;</b>Dr. Regine Paul <br />Researcher <br />HowSAFE project <br /> <br />Law &amp; Society Unit <br />Faculty of Sociology <br />University of Bielefeld <br />Germany<br /><div class="js-profile-less-about u-linkUnstyled u-tcGrayDarker u-textDecorationUnderline u-displayNone">less</div></div></div><div class="ri-section"><div class="ri-section-header"><span>Interests</span><a class="ri-more-link js-profile-ri-list-card" data-click-track="profile-user-info-primary-research-interest" data-has-card-for-ri-list="1245262">View All (28)</a></div><div class="ri-tags-container"><a data-click-track="profile-user-info-expand-research-interests" data-has-card-for-ri-list="1245262" href="https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Policy"><div id="js-react-on-rails-context" style="display:none" 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id="Pill-react-component-af482f6f-360f-4ed2-a078-00e723a4a91e"></div> </a></div></div><div class="external-links-container"><ul class="profile-links new-profile js-UserInfo-social"><li class="left-most js-UserInfo-social-cv" data-broccoli-component="user-info.cv-button" data-click-track="profile-user-info-cv" data-cv-filename="Vita_and_Publications_PAUL_November_2017.pdf" data-placement="top" data-toggle="tooltip" href="/ReginePaul/CurriculumVitae"><button class="ds2-5-text-link ds2-5-text-link--small" style="font-size: 20px; letter-spacing: 0.8px"><span class="ds2-5-text-link__content">CV</span></button></li><li class="profile-profiles js-social-profiles-container"><i class="fa fa-spin fa-spinner"></i></li></ul></div></div></div><div class="right-panel-container"><div class="user-content-wrapper"><div class="uploads-container" id="social-redesign-work-container"><div class="upload-header"><h2 class="ds2-5-heading-sans-serif-xs">Uploads</h2></div><div class="nav-container 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European Integration (special issue of EuropeNow)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/35623818/The_Crises_of_European_Integration_special_issue_of_EuropeNow_">The Crises of European Integration (special issue of EuropeNow)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/NicoleShea1">Nicole Shea</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>EuropeNow</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span 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text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843301/Society_Regulation_and_Governance_New_Modes_of_Social_Change">Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change?</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-mainz.academia.edu/MarcM%C3%B6lders">Marc Mölders</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/AlfonsBora">Alfons Bora</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper 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Arranging Legality in European Labor Migration Policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190314/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7358821/The_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing_Arranging_Legality_in_European_Labor_Migration_Policies">The Political Economy of Border-Drawing. Arranging Legality in European Labor Migration Policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The conditions for non-EU migrant workers to gain legal entry to Britain, France, and Germany are...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The conditions for non-EU migrant workers to gain legal entry to Britain, France, and Germany are at the same time similar and quite different. To explain this variation this book compares the fine-grained legal categories for migrant workers in each country, and examines the interaction of economic, social, and cultural rationales in determining migrant legality. Rather than investigating the failure of borders to keep unauthorized migrants out, the author highlights the different policies of each country as “border-drawing” actions. Policymakers draw lines between different migrant groups, and between migrants and citizens, through considerations of both their economic utility and skills, but also their places of origin and prospects for social integration. Overall, migrant worker legality is arranged against the backdrop of the specific vision each country has of itself in an economically competitive, globalized world with rapidly changing welfare and citizenship models.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c75e96d8ef9802772c9972a14864aade" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:52190314,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7358821,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190314/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7358821"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7358821"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7358821; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7358821]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7358821]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7358821; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7358821']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7358821, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c75e96d8ef9802772c9972a14864aade" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7358821]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7358821,"title":"The Political Economy of Border-Drawing. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="profile--tab_heading_container js-section-heading" data-section="Journal articles on risk-based regulation" id="Journal articles on risk-based regulation"><h3 class="profile--tab_heading_container">Journal articles on risk-based regulation by Regine Paul</h3></div><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="33947981"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/33947981/Varieties_of_Risk_Regulation_in_Europe_Coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states_pre_print_version_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity &amp; occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53909969/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/33947981/Varieties_of_Risk_Regulation_in_Europe_Coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states_pre_print_version_">Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity &amp; occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://kcl.academia.edu/HenryRothstein">Henry Rothstein</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/FredericBouder">Frederic Bouder</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Socio-Economic Review</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. While the United Kingdom explicitly sanctions risk-cost-benefit trade-offs, other European countries mandate ambitious safety goals. That contrast appears to reflect cleavages identified in the Varieties of Capitalism literature, which suggests worker protection regimes are stronger in coordinated than in liberal-market economies. Our analysis of Germany, France, UK, and the Netherlands, shows that the varied organisation of their regulatory regimes is explained through a three-way complementarity with their welfare systems and modes of coordination. However, despite varied headline goals, we find no systematic differences in the stringency of those countries&#39; regulatory protections insofar as they all make trade-offs on safety. Instead, the explicitness, rationalisations and logics of trade-offs vary according to each country&#39;s legal system, state tradition, and coupling between regulation and welfare system.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="726c26256ac4f07c83f45a81d52cfd3d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53909969,&quot;asset_id&quot;:33947981,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53909969/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="33947981"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="33947981"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33947981; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33947981]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33947981]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33947981; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='33947981']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 33947981, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "726c26256ac4f07c83f45a81d52cfd3d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=33947981]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":33947981,"title":"Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity \u0026 occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. While the United Kingdom explicitly sanctions risk-cost-benefit trade-offs, other European countries mandate ambitious safety goals. That contrast appears to reflect cleavages identified in the Varieties of Capitalism literature, which suggests worker protection regimes are stronger in coordinated than in liberal-market economies. Our analysis of Germany, France, UK, and the Netherlands, shows that the varied organisation of their regulatory regimes is explained through a three-way complementarity with their welfare systems and modes of coordination. However, despite varied headline goals, we find no systematic differences in the stringency of those countries' regulatory protections insofar as they all make trade-offs on safety. Instead, the explicitness, rationalisations and logics of trade-offs vary according to each country's legal system, state tradition, and coupling between regulation and welfare system.","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2017,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Socio-Economic Review"},"translated_abstract":"This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. While the United Kingdom explicitly sanctions risk-cost-benefit trade-offs, other European countries mandate ambitious safety goals. That contrast appears to reflect cleavages identified in the Varieties of Capitalism literature, which suggests worker protection regimes are stronger in coordinated than in liberal-market economies. Our analysis of Germany, France, UK, and the Netherlands, shows that the varied organisation of their regulatory regimes is explained through a three-way complementarity with their welfare systems and modes of coordination. However, despite varied headline goals, we find no systematic differences in the stringency of those countries' regulatory protections insofar as they all make trade-offs on safety. Instead, the explicitness, rationalisations and logics of trade-offs vary according to each country's legal system, state tradition, and coupling between regulation and welfare system.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/33947981/Varieties_of_Risk_Regulation_in_Europe_Coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states_pre_print_version_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2017-07-19T11:23:22.776-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":29773977,"work_id":33947981,"tagging_user_id":1245262,"tagged_user_id":1938899,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"h***n@kcl.ac.uk","affiliation":"King's College London","display_order":1,"name":"Henry Rothstein","title":"Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity \u0026 occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print 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Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_Studies"},{"id":2727,"name":"Welfare State","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Welfare_State"},{"id":11035,"name":"Regulation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Regulation"},{"id":12061,"name":"Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Management"},{"id":47112,"name":"Varieties of Capitalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Varieties_of_Capitalism"},{"id":472306,"name":"Workplace health and safety","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Workplace_health_and_safety"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="31907419"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control." class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control">Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control.</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of European Integration</span><span>, Apr 24, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionaliz...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="31907419"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="31907419"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 31907419; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=31907419]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=31907419]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 31907419; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='31907419']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 31907419, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=31907419]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":31907419,"title":"Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control.","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1080/07036337.2017.1320553","issue":"6","volume":"39","abstract":"Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.","journal_name":"Journal of European Integration 39(6)","page_numbers":"689-706","publication_date":{"day":24,"month":4,"year":2017,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of European Integration"},"translated_abstract":"Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2017-03-17T07:46:26.389-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1074,"name":"Organizational Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Organizational_Theory"},{"id":2817,"name":"Border Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Border_Studies"},{"id":12061,"name":"Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Management"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":19160,"name":"New Institutionalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/New_Institutionalism"},{"id":251024,"name":"New Organizational Institutionalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/New_Organizational_Institutionalism"},{"id":359227,"name":"FRONTEX","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/FRONTEX"},{"id":1770098,"name":"Risk Based Inspection","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Based_Inspection"}],"urls":[{"id":8085282,"url":"http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/9dSczRIg28XHyES8EP9v/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="29843185"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany&#39;s federal system [in German]" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_">Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany&#39;s federal system [in German]</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) count...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843185"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843185"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843185; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843185]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843185]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843185; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843185']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843185, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843185]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843185,"title":"Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany's federal system [in German]","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.","journal_name":"der moderne staat - Zeitschrift für Public Policy, Recht und Management 9(2)","publication_date":{"day":1,"month":12,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2016-11-14T23:22:30.754-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":3287,"name":"Regulation And Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Regulation_And_Governance"},{"id":6285,"name":"Federalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Federalism"},{"id":12061,"name":"Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Management"},{"id":33618,"name":"Multi-level governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Multi-level_governance"},{"id":50576,"name":"Germany","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Germany"},{"id":169699,"name":"Isomorphism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Isomorphism"},{"id":1770098,"name":"Risk Based Inspection","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Based_Inspection"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="13172818"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies." class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies">Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies.</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="13172818"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="13172818"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 13172818; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=13172818]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=13172818]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 13172818; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='13172818']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 13172818, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=13172818]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":13172818,"title":"Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies.","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.","location":"http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13669877.2015.1074936","more_info":"co-authored with Frédéric Bouder and Mara Wesseling","journal_name":"Journal of Risk Research"},"translated_abstract":"Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-06-22T05:51:20.100-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":3996,"name":"Risk Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Governance"},{"id":18552,"name":"Europeanization","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Europeanization"},{"id":29841,"name":"Public Policy Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Public_Policy_Analysis"}],"urls":[{"id":7025749,"url":"http://tandfonline.com/eprint/V6iTsMdviaNQTJJ6f8Pc/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7396025"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7396025/Risk_based_regulation_in_continental_Europe_Explaining_the_corporatist_turn_to_risk_in_German_work_safety_policies"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? Explaining the corporatist turn to risk in German work safety policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/39087467/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7396025/Risk_based_regulation_in_continental_Europe_Explaining_the_corporatist_turn_to_risk_in_German_work_safety_policies">Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? Explaining the corporatist turn to risk in German work safety policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-bielefeld.academia.edu/MichaelHuber">Michael Huber</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European Policy Analysis 1(2)</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulati...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulation seems to be a stranger to continental European settings. The more fragmented and often corporatist forms of decision-making in countries such as Germany have been identified as key obstacles to a risk-based rationalization of policy interventions. Based on an in-depth case study of German work safety policies, this article nuances this account theoretically and empirically. It argues, firstly, that current risk-based regulation studies suffer from a systemic bias toward the competition-oriented forms of regulation so widely spread in the Anglo-Saxon world. They thereby misread the dynamics and rationalities of alternative regulatory approaches elsewhere in Europe. Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. We also propose the first advances toward such a new research agenda.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="10ebd96ac046b4a7f0505d07d8a80201" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:39087467,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7396025,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/39087467/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7396025"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7396025"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7396025; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7396025]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7396025]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7396025; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7396025']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7396025, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "10ebd96ac046b4a7f0505d07d8a80201" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7396025]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7396025,"title":"Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? Explaining the corporatist turn to risk in German work safety policies","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulation seems to be a stranger to continental European settings. The more fragmented and often corporatist forms of decision-making in countries such as Germany have been identified as key obstacles to a risk-based rationalization of policy interventions. Based on an in-depth case study of German work safety policies, this article nuances this account theoretically and empirically. It argues, firstly, that current risk-based regulation studies suffer from a systemic bias toward the competition-oriented forms of regulation so widely spread in the Anglo-Saxon world. They thereby misread the dynamics and rationalities of alternative regulatory approaches elsewhere in Europe. Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. We also propose the first advances toward such a new research agenda. ","more_info":"co-authored with Michael Huber","publication_name":"European Policy Analysis 1(2)"},"translated_abstract":"While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulation seems to be a stranger to continental European settings. The more fragmented and often corporatist forms of decision-making in countries such as Germany have been identified as key obstacles to a risk-based rationalization of policy interventions. Based on an in-depth case study of German work safety policies, this article nuances this account theoretically and empirically. It argues, firstly, that current risk-based regulation studies suffer from a systemic bias toward the competition-oriented forms of regulation so widely spread in the Anglo-Saxon world. They thereby misread the dynamics and rationalities of alternative regulatory approaches elsewhere in Europe. Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. We also propose the first advances toward such a new research agenda. ","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7396025/Risk_based_regulation_in_continental_Europe_Explaining_the_corporatist_turn_to_risk_in_German_work_safety_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-19T00:05:01.452-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[{"id":1350098,"work_id":7396025,"tagging_user_id":1245262,"tagged_user_id":27044089,"co_author_invite_id":null,"email":"m***r@uni-bielefeld.de","affiliation":"Universität Bielefeld","display_order":null,"name":"Michael Huber","title":"Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? 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Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/19543542/Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies">Negotiating varieties of capitalism? Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy c...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="19543542"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="19543542"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 19543542; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=19543542]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=19543542]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 19543542; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='19543542']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 19543542, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=19543542]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":19543542,"title":"Negotiating varieties of capitalism? Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.","more_info":"forthcoming in special issue on crisis and migration policy","journal_name":"Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 42(10)","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/19543542/Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-12-07T14:09:54.247-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":796,"name":"Comparative Politics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Comparative_Politics"},{"id":802,"name":"Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Political_Economy"},{"id":7313,"name":"Labor Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Labor_Migration"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":15884,"name":"Cultural Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cultural_Political_Economy"},{"id":47112,"name":"Varieties of Capitalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Varieties_of_Capitalism"},{"id":48036,"name":"International Migration and Immigration Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/International_Migration_and_Immigration_Policy"},{"id":50576,"name":"Germany","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Germany"},{"id":122811,"name":"Britain","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Britain"},{"id":314761,"name":"Critical Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Critical_Political_Economy"}],"urls":[{"id":7025748,"url":"http://tandfonline.com/eprint/jthptbiybrMZtvnhewTn/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1436933"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights">Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level g...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f8437c1d3bf369c56d6dc923db28523c" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32796713,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1436933,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1436933"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1436933"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436933; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436933]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436933]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436933; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1436933']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1436933, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f8437c1d3bf369c56d6dc923db28523c" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1436933]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1436933,"title":"Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.","more_info":"published in 'Regions \u0026 Cohesion', volume 3, issue 3, pp. 56-85, co-authored with Emma Carmel","journal_name":"Regions \u0026 Cohesion","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":12,"year":2013,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2012-02-26T19:02:30.477-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":32796713,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32796713/Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version-libre.pdf?1391172913=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DComplex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059209\u0026Signature=b4Ozxah4JOFkykNd9r9FSkN-WGA4alho5cf-21M4Yy6uKmdRJGMxdBDRvHs0cuAuoPVDv-6isXkySMXcaXPFI5xpX~xh5Unn-qisjGEpeYrFIprIGCVjTCs3tUe8dhJyThIPV~hclxlus5uDFVygTr5NSo0HcpGSfazTjXRbAYTO-uh3cBiC8Vd8QUcFg2XM9ZxYjX7k9psXROJPpCZZye65USGpIZRRHjMr2usvtXT2K80oXGxi~E-sq6UeJ5Y8tJd2bgYdat5vrmMG1MeWi~n5Scht2Fg5F57P8JcN7KAxC0xJ5d5kG7QYSOqupcD1kZQipnUpr3z5TOCxg1m9Bg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights","translated_slug":"","page_count":30,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":32796713,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32796713/Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version-libre.pdf?1391172913=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DComplex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059209\u0026Signature=b4Ozxah4JOFkykNd9r9FSkN-WGA4alho5cf-21M4Yy6uKmdRJGMxdBDRvHs0cuAuoPVDv-6isXkySMXcaXPFI5xpX~xh5Unn-qisjGEpeYrFIprIGCVjTCs3tUe8dhJyThIPV~hclxlus5uDFVygTr5NSo0HcpGSfazTjXRbAYTO-uh3cBiC8Vd8QUcFg2XM9ZxYjX7k9psXROJPpCZZye65USGpIZRRHjMr2usvtXT2K80oXGxi~E-sq6UeJ5Y8tJd2bgYdat5vrmMG1MeWi~n5Scht2Fg5F57P8JcN7KAxC0xJ5d5kG7QYSOqupcD1kZQipnUpr3z5TOCxg1m9Bg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":2409,"name":"Mobility/Mobilities","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mobility_Mobilities"},{"id":8577,"name":"Social Stratification","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Stratification"},{"id":10347,"name":"European Union","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_Union"},{"id":29841,"name":"Public Policy Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Public_Policy_Analysis"},{"id":48036,"name":"International Migration and Immigration Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/International_Migration_and_Immigration_Policy"},{"id":97208,"name":"Rights of Migrant Workers, labour rights","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rights_of_Migrant_Workers_labour_rights"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1437056"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437056/Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53910087/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437056/Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe">Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2004 and 2007 have shifted the context for member state policies geared towards the admission of non-EU workers as well. I content that the strategic use of the internal mobility regime as a justification for highly selective recruitment of foreign labor from outside the EU deserves more analytical attention. This contribution therefore examines how labor migration policies (LMP) of three member states - the United Kingdom, France and Germany – make use of the EU free movement framework in current legislation and how associated policy rationales are justified. In an interpretive policy analysis of legislative documents and decision-makers’ meaning-making as related in semi-structured interviews, I identify the logics, tools and rationales that link LMP to EU free movement. These links are highly selective and serve shared as well as nationally distinct governance goals. Across all three cases LMPs ascribe various degrees of relevance to EU-internal labor supply depending on the different skill levels of migrants targeted in LMP. This pattern of shared cross-national economic coordination in a common market is compounded by national migration control agendas: member states draw on EU free movement to justify migration restrictions targeted at specific sending countries. As a result, the governance of the foreign workforce produces skills-based and origin-based privileges rather than granting universal rights to mobile migrant workers in Europe.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="b81b0c1d6575ce086ca1599f41fa0742" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53910087,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437056,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53910087/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437056"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437056"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437056; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437056]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437056]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437056; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437056']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437056, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "b81b0c1d6575ce086ca1599f41fa0742" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437056]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437056,"title":"Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2004 and 2007 have shifted the context for member state policies geared towards the admission of non-EU workers as well. I content that the strategic use of the internal mobility regime as a justification for highly selective recruitment of foreign labor from outside the EU deserves more analytical attention. This contribution therefore examines how labor migration policies (LMP) of three member states - the United Kingdom, France and Germany – make use of the EU free movement framework in current legislation and how associated policy rationales are justified. In an interpretive policy analysis of legislative documents and decision-makers’ meaning-making as related in semi-structured interviews, I identify the logics, tools and rationales that link LMP to EU free movement. These links are highly selective and serve shared as well as nationally distinct governance goals. Across all three cases LMPs ascribe various degrees of relevance to EU-internal labor supply depending on the different skill levels of migrants targeted in LMP. This pattern of shared cross-national economic coordination in a common market is compounded by national migration control agendas: member states draw on EU free movement to justify migration restrictions targeted at specific sending countries. As a result, the governance of the foreign workforce produces skills-based and origin-based privileges rather than granting universal rights to mobile migrant workers in Europe.","more_info":"published as part of a special issue on EU free movement rights, co-edited with Emma Carmel, in 'Policy Studies', volume 34, issue 2, pp. 122-141","journal_name":"Policy Studies","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":3,"year":2013,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2004 and 2007 have shifted the context for member state policies geared towards the admission of non-EU workers as well. I content that the strategic use of the internal mobility regime as a justification for highly selective recruitment of foreign labor from outside the EU deserves more analytical attention. This contribution therefore examines how labor migration policies (LMP) of three member states - the United Kingdom, France and Germany – make use of the EU free movement framework in current legislation and how associated policy rationales are justified. In an interpretive policy analysis of legislative documents and decision-makers’ meaning-making as related in semi-structured interviews, I identify the logics, tools and rationales that link LMP to EU free movement. These links are highly selective and serve shared as well as nationally distinct governance goals. Across all three cases LMPs ascribe various degrees of relevance to EU-internal labor supply depending on the different skill levels of migrants targeted in LMP. This pattern of shared cross-national economic coordination in a common market is compounded by national migration control agendas: member states draw on EU free movement to justify migration restrictions targeted at specific sending countries. As a result, the governance of the foreign workforce produces skills-based and origin-based privileges rather than granting universal rights to mobile migrant workers in Europe.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/1437056/Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2012-02-26T19:40:11.083-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":53910087,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53910087/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2013_Paul_EU_mobility_and_LMP_PolicyStudies.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53910087/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_move.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/53910087/2013_Paul_EU_mobility_and_LMP_PolicyStudies-libre.pdf?1500489551=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DStrategic_contextualization_EU_free_move.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=VaPmSybJZxWh0DZFsruAxX8RA3YQyEmuQ6NHsQMZR~YUczmz2cA61wNsy9hz3Nr1O22DhByduZ1wyDGxNXybmN8csG5kawUOwVqol5d2LutWJywbroO487p1Yd5-wjjuM1umIQCq~VqiT9gLWMMUfWCIsBC48los~JQcmnXyHO6tGu6KTqYEIl0whmIp1sYzCfG7zej2qL3M0VsjutAJbNxpbru57mO7YYUPYH9tKgRSMMZ3FbHCAThZmDnQetJ~~~7rBm8RNwcDKrY05RzupmVsJlRUPmr~rUwqMEvmtMQ~~sXnMI5AeL6DAuus9PuemvuBYN4YESyE7YLXsPr3sA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe","translated_slug":"","page_count":21,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":53910087,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53910087/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2013_Paul_EU_mobility_and_LMP_PolicyStudies.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53910087/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_move.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/53910087/2013_Paul_EU_mobility_and_LMP_PolicyStudies-libre.pdf?1500489551=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DStrategic_contextualization_EU_free_move.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=VaPmSybJZxWh0DZFsruAxX8RA3YQyEmuQ6NHsQMZR~YUczmz2cA61wNsy9hz3Nr1O22DhByduZ1wyDGxNXybmN8csG5kawUOwVqol5d2LutWJywbroO487p1Yd5-wjjuM1umIQCq~VqiT9gLWMMUfWCIsBC48los~JQcmnXyHO6tGu6KTqYEIl0whmIp1sYzCfG7zej2qL3M0VsjutAJbNxpbru57mO7YYUPYH9tKgRSMMZ3FbHCAThZmDnQetJ~~~7rBm8RNwcDKrY05RzupmVsJlRUPmr~rUwqMEvmtMQ~~sXnMI5AeL6DAuus9PuemvuBYN4YESyE7YLXsPr3sA__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":5167,"name":"Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Governance"},{"id":7313,"name":"Labor Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Labor_Migration"},{"id":18882,"name":"Comparative Public Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Comparative_Public_Policy"},{"id":19025,"name":"Enlargement and Integration in the EU","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Enlargement_and_Integration_in_the_EU"},{"id":81592,"name":"EU free movement rights","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/EU_free_movement_rights"}],"urls":[{"id":1099721,"url":"http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/vvDICmSsjsKBYCsNqKj2/full#.UYOnhXe3Tdg"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1437019"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437019/Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cultural_political_economy_of_European_labour_migration_policies"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Limits of the competition state? The cultural political economy of European labour migration policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190274/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437019/Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cultural_political_economy_of_European_labour_migration_policies">Limits of the competition state? The cultural political economy of European labour migration policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Labour migration has been revitalised as part of economic competition and growth strategies acros...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Labour migration has been revitalised as part of economic competition and growth strategies across Europe over the last decade. Scholars have framed policy changes towards more liberal recruitment as a turn towards ‘competition state’ and Schumpeterian innovation goals. This article evaluates the extent to which British, French and German labour admission policies are dominated by competition state logics. I apply a cultural political economy perspective, thereby substantiating this relatively new approach analytically and testing its usefulness in capturing the economic governance of labour migration. I argue that the political ordering of admissions with regard to skill level target, and causal, spatial, and operational focuses of recruitment indicates a fragmented cultural political economy of labour migration: while competition state logics shape the economic imaginary of ‘high-skilled global labour competiveness’, other logics dominate the imaginaries of ‘skilled national labour shortages’, and ‘lower skilled EU labour self-sufficiency’. Findings indicate limits to competition state theory in explaining labour migration policy, demonstrate the weight of competing state projects, and highlight the powerful role of semiotic political ordering processes in coping with policy tensions.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="2aef7542a482898819fed089b824aed5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:52190274,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437019,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190274/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437019"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437019"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437019; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437019]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437019]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437019; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437019']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437019, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "2aef7542a482898819fed089b824aed5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437019]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437019,"title":"Limits of the competition state? 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I argue that the political ordering of admissions with regard to skill level target, and causal, spatial, and operational focuses of recruitment indicates a fragmented cultural political economy of labour migration: while competition state logics shape the economic imaginary of ‘high-skilled global labour competiveness’, other logics dominate the imaginaries of ‘skilled national labour shortages’, and ‘lower skilled EU labour self-sufficiency’. Findings indicate limits to competition state theory in explaining labour migration policy, demonstrate the weight of competing state projects, and highlight the powerful role of semiotic political ordering processes in coping with policy tensions.","more_info":"published in 'Critical Policy Studies', 2012, vol. 6, issue 4, pp. 379-401","journal_name":"Critical Policy Studies","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":12,"year":2012,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Labour migration has been revitalised as part of economic competition and growth strategies across Europe over the last decade. Scholars have framed policy changes towards more liberal recruitment as a turn towards ‘competition state’ and Schumpeterian innovation goals. This article evaluates the extent to which British, French and German labour admission policies are dominated by competition state logics. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1437041"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437041/The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437041/The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_">The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>La Rivista delle Politiche Sociali (Italian …</span><span>, Jan 1, 2010</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range of policies, narratives, definitions and processes for governing migration, and in particular for the insertion of new governing logics and relationships under the heading of ‘new immigration policy’. The struggle to assert a coherent governance regime in the field of migration involves combining and re-combining (assembling) different policy narratives, institutional assumptions and relationships within the EU, and between EU and member states. These range across narratives of (human) rights, security, economic needs, and social inclusion all of which intersect in various ways and create tensions between them. In its attempt to cohere these narratives, the EU does not only create a new policy terrain but it also supports its legitimate claim to govern this terrain in a particular framework of sense-making.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437041"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437041"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437041; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437041]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437041]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437041; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437041']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437041, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437041]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437041,"title":"The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range of policies, narratives, definitions and processes for governing migration, and in particular for the insertion of new governing logics and relationships under the heading of ‘new immigration policy’. 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In its attempt to cohere these narratives, the EU does not only create a new policy terrain but it also supports its legitimate claim to govern this terrain in a particular framework of sense-making.","more_info":"published in 'La Rivisita delle Politiche Sociali' (Italian Journal of Social Policy), 1/2010, pp. 209-230, co-authored with Emma Carmel","publisher":"opus.bath.ac.uk","publication_date":{"day":1,"month":1,"year":2010,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"La Rivista delle Politiche Sociali (Italian …"},"translated_abstract":"Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range of policies, narratives, definitions and processes for governing migration, and in particular for the insertion of new governing logics and relationships under the heading of ‘new immigration policy’. 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In its attempt to cohere these narratives, the EU does not only create a new policy terrain but it also supports its legitimate claim to govern this terrain in a particular framework of sense-making.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/1437041/The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2012-02-26T19:27:52.373-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":5167,"name":"Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Governance"},{"id":96237,"name":"Justice and Home affairs","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Justice_and_Home_affairs"},{"id":409024,"name":"EU public policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/EU_public_policy"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="profile--tab_heading_container js-section-heading" data-section="Book chapters" id="Book chapters"><h3 class="profile--tab_heading_container">Book chapters by Regine Paul</h3></div><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="35623725"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/35623725/Risk_Analysis_as_a_Governance_Tool_in_European_Border_Control"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk Analysis as a Governance Tool in European Border Control" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/55492038/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/35623725/Risk_Analysis_as_a_Governance_Tool_in_European_Border_Control">Risk Analysis as a Governance Tool in European Border Control</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Routledge Handbook on the Politics of Migration in Europe (edited by Weinar, A., Bonjour, S., Siegel, M. and L. Zhyznomirska)</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="be983ed97a08868aaedc56bf935b2057" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55492038,&quot;asset_id&quot;:35623725,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55492038/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="35623725"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="35623725"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623725; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623725]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623725]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623725; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='35623725']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 35623725, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "be983ed97a08868aaedc56bf935b2057" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=35623725]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":35623725,"title":"Risk Analysis as a Governance Tool in European Border Control","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2018,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Routledge Handbook on the Politics of Migration in Europe (edited by Weinar, A., Bonjour, S., Siegel, M. and L. 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Rijken and T. de Lange)</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rat...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rather intuitively take for granted regulatory distinctions. This includes schisms such as EU free movers vs. workers from outside the EU or high-skilled vs. low-skilled migrant workers but also a relative acceptance of the different rights regimes applying across categories of migrant worker. This chapter challenges physically biased notions of borders, often featuring in migration policy research, as territorial demarcation lines which lose their effectiveness when migrants cross them without authorization. Instead, migration governance is conceptualized as a border-drawing activity by which migrants are classified and thus constructed as ‘legal’ or ‘illegal’ in highly selective and structurally embedded processes of meaning-making. The chapter forges a conceptual hub for critically unpacking the normative underbelly of regulatory distinctions of migrant workers in European migration governance and for discussing how such deeply political distinctions fashion (exploitable) positions for low-waged migrant workers.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="efe16d879a609c86005e11cffc0d7bed" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55491966,&quot;asset_id&quot;:35623651,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55491966/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="35623651"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="35623651"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623651; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623651]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623651]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623651; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='35623651']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 35623651, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "efe16d879a609c86005e11cffc0d7bed" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=35623651]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":35623651,"title":"How low-skilled migrant workers are made: border-drawing in migration policy","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rather intuitively take for granted regulatory distinctions. 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Yet, in addition to the conceptual ambiguities associated with regulation and governance more generally discussed in this volume, conceptualizations of risk have been equally ambiguous. Some see risks as intrinsically unstable ever emerging regulatory problems, others discuss the need to develop ever new regulatory tools and governance arrangements to deal with risk complexity, yet others see risk as a new regulatory heuristic which can itself contribute a new “lens through which to view the world” (Bridget Hutter) in regulation and governance. As an effect, research exchange across conceptual and analytical barriers is greatly hampered. This contribution examines the use of risk concepts in regulation and governance studies with the dual aim of a) mapping and evaluating analytical cleavages, and b) establishing the potential for exchange about new modes of intentional societal change beyond such cleavages. It hence also sets the terrain for the volume’s subsequent two empirical chapters. Based on a comprehensive conceptual review of existing research the chapter identifies a four-fold distinction of analytical approaches which is shaped by variation across two dimensions: the conceptualization of intervention (as information-theoretical or decision-theoretical) and the analytical relationship between risk and political decision-making (risk as issue or tool for interventions). The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk regulation – are discussed and compared in-depth to inform a discussion of the value and limits of the resulting division of research labour and respective novelty claims.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="483463d353b93ecd841fe0ce142baf4a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:52250130,&quot;asset_id&quot;:29843321,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52250130/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843321"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843321"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843321; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843321]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843321]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843321; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843321']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843321, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "483463d353b93ecd841fe0ce142baf4a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843321]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843321,"title":"Risk: New Issue or New Tool in Regulation and Governance Research?","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Risk has been a prime carrier of novelty claims in social sciences studies on societal decision-making over the last couple of decades. 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An Introduction" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/55491891/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843309/Society_Regulation_and_Governance_New_Modes_of_Social_Change_An_Introduction">Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change? An Introduction</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-mainz.academia.edu/MarcM%C3%B6lders">Marc Mölders</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change?</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c6245363cd254a015ddefd8164323594" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55491891,&quot;asset_id&quot;:29843309,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55491891/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843309"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843309"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843309; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843309]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843309]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843309; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843309']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843309, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c6245363cd254a015ddefd8164323594" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843309]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843309,"title":"Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change? 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By scrutinsing the relationship between labour migration policies (LMP) and welfare states in Germany and France, the chapter draws a comparative counterpoint to migration in the Scandinavian universal welfare state context. <br />From a welfare regime perspective economic utility rationales entailed in migration policies should coincide relatively smoothly with Bismarckian social insurance model and entitlement logics. While this claim seems valid at first glance, our empirical analysis exposes that different policy contexts in Germany and France trigger a highly variable usage, meaning and political contestation of Bismarckian entitlement logics. The German example showcases that Bismarckian pathways of &#39;deserved&#39; and &#39;earned&#39; socio-economic inclusion can be amplified in LMP in an environment where economic selectivity of migrant workers does not seem to clash with the norms of citizenship. In the French case, however, post-colonialism, Republican citizenship and related notions of belonging directly conflict with the attempt to use Bismarckian entitlement logics in labour admissions governance and explain the continued fierce political struggles over &#39;immigration choisie&#39;. <br />The chapter thus indicates that the possibilities for what we label ‘governance of context’ are highly bounded. They are delimited by the political acceptability of re-constituting the very foundations of the citizenship model through LMP. Eventually, context does not just matter as a passive container within which policies operate; it is an active and constantly re-shaped component of political struggles over migration policymaking.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3a5c84efc07353b037a18e2d3fd8d8e4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:31405519,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437048,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/31405519/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437048"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437048"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437048; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437048]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437048]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437048; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437048']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437048, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3a5c84efc07353b037a18e2d3fd8d8e4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437048]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437048,"title":"Managing Diverse Policy Contexts: The Welfare State as Repertoire of Policy Logics in German and French Labour Migration Governance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This chapter examines the relationship between welfare states and migration from a critical political economy perspective, arguing that welfare states serve as repertoire of policy logics which are employed strategically in initial migrant admissions to serve specific selectivity goals and manage the wider policy context. 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In the French case, however, post-colonialism, Republican citizenship and related notions of belonging directly conflict with the attempt to use Bismarckian entitlement logics in labour admissions governance and explain the continued fierce political struggles over 'immigration choisie'. \r\nThe chapter thus indicates that the possibilities for what we label ‘governance of context’ are highly bounded. They are delimited by the political acceptability of re-constituting the very foundations of the citizenship model through LMP. Eventually, context does not just matter as a passive container within which policies operate; it is an active and constantly re-shaped component of political struggles over migration policymaking.","more_info":"In: Vad Jønsson, H., Onasch, L., Pellander, S. and M. Wickstrom (eds.) 2013: Migrations and welfare states: Policies, discourses and institutions. 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worse socio-economic position, and contribute to their exclusion. However, its contribution-based logic has also been the primary mode of initial welfare access for ...</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1436935"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1436935"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436935; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436935]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436935]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436935; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1436935']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1436935, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1436935]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1436935,"title":"Differential inclusion in Germany's conservative welfare state: policy legacies and structural constraints","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"The German welfare state and its emphasis on status maintenance seem to cement migrants\u0026amp;amp;#x27; worse socio-economic position, and contribute to their exclusion. 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Arranging Legality in European Labor Migration Policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The conditions for non-EU migrant workers to gain legal entry to Britain, France, and Germany are...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The conditions for non-EU migrant workers to gain legal entry to Britain, France, and Germany are at the same time similar and quite different. To explain this variation this book compares the fine-grained legal categories for migrant workers in each country, and examines the interaction of economic, social, and cultural rationales in determining migrant legality. 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Overall, migrant worker legality is arranged against the backdrop of the specific vision each country has of itself in an economically competitive, globalized world with rapidly changing welfare and citizenship models.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/7358821/The_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing_Arranging_Legality_in_European_Labor_Migration_Policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2014-06-15T20:24:30.191-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"book","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":52190314,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190314/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Paul_2015_monograph_intro.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190314/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52190314/Paul_2015_monograph_intro-libre.pdf?1489763507=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059208\u0026Signature=WCxI4D8PFOPESkrE0OEv76qFxuekY0RkSFNEHWBBaVrffiKbF0qma5sqdAQeYwdoLcLhK3rpYZ7xbtvpP-ouIx8vUV5QnhOWomOZcqCOaqH-uIEOrSDOTqE1qu0v97vXhVvUYE71JOuhwIOFQLi9IQNSTXm7OGkrmBXAf9PWrU3xU85BCuNnsOMRPSNosoLkfc~JPPBoDvpmDz8~VGqakirnAtnanaEF~YSGae~DQwhtTTqXTf~eIfqG8nnml3GqcPTn2ZXLD~pb-JkxYuiXOjT4-K9Rh9tqkNXq9TDV0Hfd~oh0ZwmNL~APfZ~69gIKmVd1AibJcv3kBlFzetRBKQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"The_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing_Arranging_Legality_in_European_Labor_Migration_Policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":28,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":52190314,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190314/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Paul_2015_monograph_intro.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190314/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"The_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52190314/Paul_2015_monograph_intro-libre.pdf?1489763507=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DThe_Political_Economy_of_Border_Drawing.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059208\u0026Signature=WCxI4D8PFOPESkrE0OEv76qFxuekY0RkSFNEHWBBaVrffiKbF0qma5sqdAQeYwdoLcLhK3rpYZ7xbtvpP-ouIx8vUV5QnhOWomOZcqCOaqH-uIEOrSDOTqE1qu0v97vXhVvUYE71JOuhwIOFQLi9IQNSTXm7OGkrmBXAf9PWrU3xU85BCuNnsOMRPSNosoLkfc~JPPBoDvpmDz8~VGqakirnAtnanaEF~YSGae~DQwhtTTqXTf~eIfqG8nnml3GqcPTn2ZXLD~pb-JkxYuiXOjT4-K9Rh9tqkNXq9TDV0Hfd~oh0ZwmNL~APfZ~69gIKmVd1AibJcv3kBlFzetRBKQ__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":383,"name":"European Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_Studies"},{"id":802,"name":"Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Political_Economy"},{"id":941,"name":"Social Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Policy"},{"id":10214,"name":"Interpretive policy analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Interpretive_policy_analysis"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":41608,"name":"Citizenship","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Citizenship"},{"id":133229,"name":"Labour migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Labour_migration"},{"id":194399,"name":"Critical Policy Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Critical_Policy_Studies"}],"urls":[{"id":3041547,"url":"http://www.berghahnbooks.com/title.php?rowtag=PaulPolitical"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> </div><div class="profile--tab_content_container js-tab-pane tab-pane" data-section-id="5308949" id="journalarticlesonriskbasedregulation"><div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="33947981"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/33947981/Varieties_of_Risk_Regulation_in_Europe_Coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states_pre_print_version_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity &amp; occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53909969/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/33947981/Varieties_of_Risk_Regulation_in_Europe_Coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states_pre_print_version_">Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity &amp; occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://kcl.academia.edu/HenryRothstein">Henry Rothstein</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://independent.academia.edu/FredericBouder">Frederic Bouder</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Socio-Economic Review</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and s...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. While the United Kingdom explicitly sanctions risk-cost-benefit trade-offs, other European countries mandate ambitious safety goals. That contrast appears to reflect cleavages identified in the Varieties of Capitalism literature, which suggests worker protection regimes are stronger in coordinated than in liberal-market economies. Our analysis of Germany, France, UK, and the Netherlands, shows that the varied organisation of their regulatory regimes is explained through a three-way complementarity with their welfare systems and modes of coordination. However, despite varied headline goals, we find no systematic differences in the stringency of those countries&#39; regulatory protections insofar as they all make trade-offs on safety. Instead, the explicitness, rationalisations and logics of trade-offs vary according to each country&#39;s legal system, state tradition, and coupling between regulation and welfare system.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="726c26256ac4f07c83f45a81d52cfd3d" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53909969,&quot;asset_id&quot;:33947981,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53909969/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="33947981"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="33947981"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33947981; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33947981]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=33947981]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 33947981; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='33947981']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 33947981, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "726c26256ac4f07c83f45a81d52cfd3d" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=33947981]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":33947981,"title":"Varieties of Risk Regulation in Europe: Coordination, complementarity \u0026 occupational safety in capitalist welfare states (pre-print version)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This paper tests the extent to which the organisation and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. 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href="https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control." class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control">Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control.</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Journal of European Integration</span><span>, Apr 24, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionaliz...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="31907419"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="31907419"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 31907419; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=31907419]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=31907419]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 31907419; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='31907419']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 31907419, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=31907419]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":31907419,"title":"Harmonization by risk analysis? Frontex and the risk-based governance of European border control.","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1080/07036337.2017.1320553","issue":"6","volume":"39","abstract":"Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.","journal_name":"Journal of European Integration 39(6)","page_numbers":"689-706","publication_date":{"day":24,"month":4,"year":2017,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Journal of European Integration"},"translated_abstract":"Scholars have recently highlighted the importance of Frontex risk analysis in the institutionalization of EU-level border control without, however, sufficiently substantiating the assumed harmonization dynamics. This article illuminates this blind spot by analyzing the appeal and uses of risk analysis as a case of institutional risk management in which EU-level actors legitimize and expand their role through a risk-based differentiation of Community decision-making. An interpretive policy analysis of three cases – Eurosur impact level assessment, the Schengen evaluation mechanism and the Internal Security Fund – indicates that Frontex and the Commission use risk analysis to capitalize on the rationalization promises of risk-based governance – efficiency, effectiveness, and transparency gains and de-politicization effects – in their institutional risk management. Risk analysis facilitates the silent harmonization of weakly integrated domains because it offers a multi-functional rationalization of Community decision-making which helps justifying increased EU-level coordination and interventions without challenging member state competencies.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/31907419/Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2017-03-17T07:46:26.389-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Harmonization_by_risk_analysis_Frontex_and_the_risk_based_governance_of_European_border_control","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1074,"name":"Organizational Theory","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Organizational_Theory"},{"id":2817,"name":"Border Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Border_Studies"},{"id":12061,"name":"Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Management"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":19160,"name":"New Institutionalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/New_Institutionalism"},{"id":251024,"name":"New Organizational Institutionalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/New_Organizational_Institutionalism"},{"id":359227,"name":"FRONTEX","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/FRONTEX"},{"id":1770098,"name":"Risk Based Inspection","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Based_Inspection"}],"urls":[{"id":8085282,"url":"http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/9dSczRIg28XHyES8EP9v/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="29843185"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany&#39;s federal system [in German]" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_">Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany&#39;s federal system [in German]</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) count...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843185"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843185"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843185; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843185]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843185]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843185; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843185']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843185, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843185]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843185,"title":"Against all odds? Explaining the diffusion of risk-based regulation in Germany's federal system [in German]","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.","journal_name":"der moderne staat - Zeitschrift für Public Policy, Recht und Management 9(2)","publication_date":{"day":1,"month":12,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"In Anglo-American public administration research and practice ‘risk-based regulation’ (RBR) counts as an instrument to enable an efficient and effective prioritization of interventions which can eventually increase the legitimacy of administrations. Despite being promoted as a universal regulatory tool, RBR is considered to be rather incompatible with Germany’s fragmented federal system. This article examines the expected institutional incompatibility critically, seeking to explain the empirically observable de-central diffusion of RBR across three policy domains: food safety, flood protection and work safety. An interpretive policy analysis demonstrates that the de-central adoption of RBR in Germany can be explained by a combination of different isomorphic adaptation processes and their support by the governance strategies of de-central actors in Europe’s multi-level governance setting. The increased reform-political weight of RBR in Germany’s federal system, and the institutional and governance-related reasons for this growing relevance, require more systematic attention in research.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/29843185/Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2016-11-14T23:22:30.754-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Against_all_odds_Explaining_the_diffusion_of_risk_based_regulation_in_Germanys_federal_system_in_German_","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":3287,"name":"Regulation And Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Regulation_And_Governance"},{"id":6285,"name":"Federalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Federalism"},{"id":12061,"name":"Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Management"},{"id":33618,"name":"Multi-level governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Multi-level_governance"},{"id":50576,"name":"Germany","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Germany"},{"id":169699,"name":"Isomorphism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Isomorphism"},{"id":1770098,"name":"Risk Based Inspection","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Based_Inspection"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="13172818"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies." class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies">Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies.</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="13172818"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="13172818"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 13172818; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=13172818]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=13172818]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 13172818; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='13172818']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 13172818, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=13172818]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":13172818,"title":"Risk-based against national obstacles? Comparing Europeanization dynamics in Dutch, French and German flooding policies.","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.","location":"http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13669877.2015.1074936","more_info":"co-authored with Frédéric Bouder and Mara Wesseling","journal_name":"Journal of Risk Research"},"translated_abstract":"Comparative studies have recently highlighted obstacles related to continental European countries’ proclivity for adopting risk-based policies. However, so far, the interface between risk-based policies in the EU and potential policy change in reluctant member states has been underexplored. We compare flooding policies in the Netherlands with those in France and Germany to establish the extent to and conditions under which EU level risk-based policies can transform national approaches. Drawing on the concept of Europeanization, we compare national adaptation pressures stemming from the EU floods directive, investigate adaptation dynamics, and account for transformations towards risk-based thinking. We find that Europeanization enabled a mainstreaming of risk-based policies in France and Germany, as national actors used the EU venue to entice a desired policy rationalization and centralization. By contrast, and somewhat unexpectedly, the Netherlands partially retrenched from EU procedures because the directive’s reporting mechanisms were considered to breach The Hague’s aspirational policy approach. Overall the paper indicates a strong potential for even ‘soft’ EU policies to ease national reluctance to risk-based governance. It also indicates limits where member states use risk-based techniques within an aspirational protection framework.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/13172818/Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-06-22T05:51:20.100-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Risk_based_against_national_obstacles_Comparing_Europeanization_dynamics_in_Dutch_French_and_German_flooding_policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":3996,"name":"Risk Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Governance"},{"id":18552,"name":"Europeanization","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Europeanization"},{"id":29841,"name":"Public Policy Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Public_Policy_Analysis"}],"urls":[{"id":7025749,"url":"http://tandfonline.com/eprint/V6iTsMdviaNQTJJ6f8Pc/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="7396025"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/7396025/Risk_based_regulation_in_continental_Europe_Explaining_the_corporatist_turn_to_risk_in_German_work_safety_policies"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? Explaining the corporatist turn to risk in German work safety policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/39087467/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/7396025/Risk_based_regulation_in_continental_Europe_Explaining_the_corporatist_turn_to_risk_in_German_work_safety_policies">Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? Explaining the corporatist turn to risk in German work safety policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-bielefeld.academia.edu/MichaelHuber">Michael Huber</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>European Policy Analysis 1(2)</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulati...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">While having gained relevance in Anglo-Saxon scholarly and political debates, risk-based regulation seems to be a stranger to continental European settings. The more fragmented and often corporatist forms of decision-making in countries such as Germany have been identified as key obstacles to a risk-based rationalization of policy interventions. Based on an in-depth case study of German work safety policies, this article nuances this account theoretically and empirically. It argues, firstly, that current risk-based regulation studies suffer from a systemic bias toward the competition-oriented forms of regulation so widely spread in the Anglo-Saxon world. They thereby misread the dynamics and rationalities of alternative regulatory approaches elsewhere in Europe. Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. We also propose the first advances toward such a new research agenda.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="10ebd96ac046b4a7f0505d07d8a80201" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:39087467,&quot;asset_id&quot;:7396025,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/39087467/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="7396025"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="7396025"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7396025; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7396025]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=7396025]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 7396025; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='7396025']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 7396025, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "10ebd96ac046b4a7f0505d07d8a80201" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=7396025]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":7396025,"title":"Risk-based regulation in continental Europe? 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Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. 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Secondly, as our policy analysis shows, this is especially true of corporatist and self-regulatory forms of policy-making, which characterize the case of German work safety. Rather than impeding the adoption of risk-based regulation, corporatist arrangements bear distinct structural features that render risk tools attractive. This finding goes beyond the scope of contemporary risk-based regulation scholarship. Unlike the predominant Anglo-Saxon argument, hopes of efficiency and effectiveness are not boosters for risk-based approaches in corporatist work safety policy arrangements. Instead, risk tools serve the structural need to sustain trust relationships, rationalize consensus-finding, and promote solidarity within self-regulatory settings. We conclude that a corporatist type of risk-based regulation needs to complement the existing competition-based type to account for the spatial, functional, and ideological diversity of empirical cases of risk-based regulation. 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Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/19543542/Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies">Negotiating varieties of capitalism? Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy c...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="19543542"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="19543542"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 19543542; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=19543542]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=19543542]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 19543542; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='19543542']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 19543542, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=19543542]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":19543542,"title":"Negotiating varieties of capitalism? Crisis and change in British and German labor migration policies","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.","more_info":"forthcoming in special issue on crisis and migration policy","journal_name":"Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 42(10)","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2016,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"Just a decade ago the liberal British and cautious German approaches to labour migration policy counted as institutional spill-overs of two opposed varieties of capitalism. Since 2014, however, Germany has offered one of the most liberal labour migration legislations across the rich world, while the Coalition government in London has severely curbed the rules of admission. Is the explanatory power of capitalist variation already exhausted for comparative labour migration policies? To what extent has the economic crisis disrupted policy paths? Adopting a cultural political economy perspective, this paper examines the interaction of crisis discourses and capitalist varieties in explaining labour migration policy changes. A comparison shows that Britain treats the liberal market economy’s openness to foreign workers as a root cause for a deeply felt migration control crisis and seeks to tame firms’ profitability strategies with restrictive policies. By contrast, German decision-makers have come to view the skill provision mechanisms of the coordinated market economy as key cure to the perceived demographic crisis, liberalising migration routes alongside this economic coordination model. Overall, the paper dethrones capitalist varieties as seemingly deterministic informants of labour migration policies. Instead, policies have both the aim and capacity to negotiate national capitalisms according to shifting notions of crisis.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/19543542/Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-12-07T14:09:54.247-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Negotiating_varieties_of_capitalism_Crisis_and_change_in_British_and_German_labor_migration_policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":796,"name":"Comparative Politics","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Comparative_Politics"},{"id":802,"name":"Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Political_Economy"},{"id":7313,"name":"Labor Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Labor_Migration"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":15884,"name":"Cultural Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cultural_Political_Economy"},{"id":47112,"name":"Varieties of Capitalism","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Varieties_of_Capitalism"},{"id":48036,"name":"International Migration and Immigration Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/International_Migration_and_Immigration_Policy"},{"id":50576,"name":"Germany","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Germany"},{"id":122811,"name":"Britain","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Britain"},{"id":314761,"name":"Critical Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Critical_Political_Economy"}],"urls":[{"id":7025748,"url":"http://tandfonline.com/eprint/jthptbiybrMZtvnhewTn/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1436933"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights">Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level g...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="f8437c1d3bf369c56d6dc923db28523c" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:32796713,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1436933,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1436933"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1436933"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436933; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436933]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436933]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436933; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1436933']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1436933, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "f8437c1d3bf369c56d6dc923db28523c" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1436933]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1436933,"title":"Complex stratification: Understanding European Union Governance of Migrant Rights","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.","more_info":"published in 'Regions \u0026 Cohesion', volume 3, issue 3, pp. 56-85, co-authored with Emma Carmel","journal_name":"Regions \u0026 Cohesion","publication_date":{"day":null,"month":12,"year":2013,"errors":{}}},"translated_abstract":"This article examines how the EU regulates the rights of migrants as a matter of regional-level governance, and with what implications. To expose the differential logics behind the governance of migrant statuses by the EU, we compare the regulation of twelve legal categories of migrants, across three dimensions of rights: civil, economic and social. We find that while asylum seekers are unequivocally subject to the most conditional regulation of rights, at the other end of the hierarchy, EU citizens’ rights status is subject to caveats and ambiguity. For other categories of EU-regulated migrant, clear hierarchies are not even observed within any one dimension of rights, and the allocation of diverse statuses to migrants is one which institutes complex stratification, privileging different kinds of rights for different categories of migrant. The emerging complex stratification of migrants rights in EU governance has wider implications for migrants rights given its articulation with co-existing member state regulations.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/1436933/Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2012-02-26T19:02:30.477-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":32796713,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32796713/Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version-libre.pdf?1391172913=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DComplex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059209\u0026Signature=b4Ozxah4JOFkykNd9r9FSkN-WGA4alho5cf-21M4Yy6uKmdRJGMxdBDRvHs0cuAuoPVDv-6isXkySMXcaXPFI5xpX~xh5Unn-qisjGEpeYrFIprIGCVjTCs3tUe8dhJyThIPV~hclxlus5uDFVygTr5NSo0HcpGSfazTjXRbAYTO-uh3cBiC8Vd8QUcFg2XM9ZxYjX7k9psXROJPpCZZye65USGpIZRRHjMr2usvtXT2K80oXGxi~E-sq6UeJ5Y8tJd2bgYdat5vrmMG1MeWi~n5Scht2Fg5F57P8JcN7KAxC0xJ5d5kG7QYSOqupcD1kZQipnUpr3z5TOCxg1m9Bg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_European_Union_Governance_of_Migrant_Rights","translated_slug":"","page_count":30,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":32796713,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/32796713/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYwOSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Complex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32796713/Carmel_and_Paul_2013_Complex_Stratification_Final_Proof_Version-libre.pdf?1391172913=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DComplex_stratification_Understanding_Eur.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059209\u0026Signature=b4Ozxah4JOFkykNd9r9FSkN-WGA4alho5cf-21M4Yy6uKmdRJGMxdBDRvHs0cuAuoPVDv-6isXkySMXcaXPFI5xpX~xh5Unn-qisjGEpeYrFIprIGCVjTCs3tUe8dhJyThIPV~hclxlus5uDFVygTr5NSo0HcpGSfazTjXRbAYTO-uh3cBiC8Vd8QUcFg2XM9ZxYjX7k9psXROJPpCZZye65USGpIZRRHjMr2usvtXT2K80oXGxi~E-sq6UeJ5Y8tJd2bgYdat5vrmMG1MeWi~n5Scht2Fg5F57P8JcN7KAxC0xJ5d5kG7QYSOqupcD1kZQipnUpr3z5TOCxg1m9Bg__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":2409,"name":"Mobility/Mobilities","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mobility_Mobilities"},{"id":8577,"name":"Social Stratification","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Social_Stratification"},{"id":10347,"name":"European Union","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_Union"},{"id":29841,"name":"Public Policy Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Public_Policy_Analysis"},{"id":48036,"name":"International Migration and Immigration Policy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/International_Migration_and_Immigration_Policy"},{"id":97208,"name":"Rights of Migrant Workers, labour rights","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Rights_of_Migrant_Workers_labour_rights"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="3453189"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/3453189/Editorial_Migration_Mobility_and_Rights_Regulation_in_the_EU"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Editorial: Migration, Mobility and Rights Regulation in the EU" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/3453189/Editorial_Migration_Mobility_and_Rights_Regulation_in_the_EU">Editorial: Migration, Mobility and Rights Regulation in the EU</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="3453189"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="3453189"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 3453189; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=3453189]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=3453189]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 3453189; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='3453189']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 3453189, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=3453189]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":3453189,"title":"Editorial: Migration, Mobility and Rights Regulation in the EU","translated_title":"","metadata":{"more_info":"published in special issue in \"Policy Studies\", 34(2), pp. 113-121, co-authored with Emma Carmel"},"translated_abstract":null,"internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/3453189/Editorial_Migration_Mobility_and_Rights_Regulation_in_the_EU","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2013-05-02T22:08:19.187-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[],"slug":"Editorial_Migration_Mobility_and_Rights_Regulation_in_the_EU","translated_slug":"","page_count":null,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[],"research_interests":[{"id":383,"name":"European Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_Studies"},{"id":1218,"name":"European integration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/European_integration"},{"id":2409,"name":"Mobility/Mobilities","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Mobility_Mobilities"},{"id":8011,"name":"Intra-European Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Intra-European_Migration"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"}],"urls":[{"id":1099738,"url":"http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01442872.2013.767583"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1437056"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437056/Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/53910087/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437056/Strategic_contextualization_EU_free_movement_labour_migration_policies_and_the_governance_of_foreign_workers_in_Europe">Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2004 and 2007 have shifted the context for member state policies geared towards the admission of non-EU workers as well. I content that the strategic use of the internal mobility regime as a justification for highly selective recruitment of foreign labor from outside the EU deserves more analytical attention. This contribution therefore examines how labor migration policies (LMP) of three member states - the United Kingdom, France and Germany – make use of the EU free movement framework in current legislation and how associated policy rationales are justified. In an interpretive policy analysis of legislative documents and decision-makers’ meaning-making as related in semi-structured interviews, I identify the logics, tools and rationales that link LMP to EU free movement. These links are highly selective and serve shared as well as nationally distinct governance goals. Across all three cases LMPs ascribe various degrees of relevance to EU-internal labor supply depending on the different skill levels of migrants targeted in LMP. This pattern of shared cross-national economic coordination in a common market is compounded by national migration control agendas: member states draw on EU free movement to justify migration restrictions targeted at specific sending countries. As a result, the governance of the foreign workforce produces skills-based and origin-based privileges rather than granting universal rights to mobile migrant workers in Europe.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="b81b0c1d6575ce086ca1599f41fa0742" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:53910087,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437056,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/53910087/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437056"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437056"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437056; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437056]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437056]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437056; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437056']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437056, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "b81b0c1d6575ce086ca1599f41fa0742" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437056]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437056,"title":"Strategic contextualization: EU free movement, labour migration policies and the governance of foreign workers in Europe","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Heightened levels of internal labor mobility since the European Union’s Eastern enlargements in 2004 and 2007 have shifted the context for member state policies geared towards the admission of non-EU workers as well. 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The cultural political economy of European labour migration policies" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190274/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437019/Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cultural_political_economy_of_European_labour_migration_policies">Limits of the competition state? The cultural political economy of European labour migration policies</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Labour migration has been revitalised as part of economic competition and growth strategies acros...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Labour migration has been revitalised as part of economic competition and growth strategies across Europe over the last decade. Scholars have framed policy changes towards more liberal recruitment as a turn towards ‘competition state’ and Schumpeterian innovation goals. This article evaluates the extent to which British, French and German labour admission policies are dominated by competition state logics. I apply a cultural political economy perspective, thereby substantiating this relatively new approach analytically and testing its usefulness in capturing the economic governance of labour migration. I argue that the political ordering of admissions with regard to skill level target, and causal, spatial, and operational focuses of recruitment indicates a fragmented cultural political economy of labour migration: while competition state logics shape the economic imaginary of ‘high-skilled global labour competiveness’, other logics dominate the imaginaries of ‘skilled national labour shortages’, and ‘lower skilled EU labour self-sufficiency’. Findings indicate limits to competition state theory in explaining labour migration policy, demonstrate the weight of competing state projects, and highlight the powerful role of semiotic political ordering processes in coping with policy tensions.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="2aef7542a482898819fed089b824aed5" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:52190274,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437019,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190274/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437019"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437019"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437019; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437019]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437019]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437019; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437019']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437019, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "2aef7542a482898819fed089b824aed5" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437019]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437019,"title":"Limits of the competition state? 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I argue that the political ordering of admissions with regard to skill level target, and causal, spatial, and operational focuses of recruitment indicates a fragmented cultural political economy of labour migration: while competition state logics shape the economic imaginary of ‘high-skilled global labour competiveness’, other logics dominate the imaginaries of ‘skilled national labour shortages’, and ‘lower skilled EU labour self-sufficiency’. 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I apply a cultural political economy perspective, thereby substantiating this relatively new approach analytically and testing its usefulness in capturing the economic governance of labour migration. I argue that the political ordering of admissions with regard to skill level target, and causal, spatial, and operational focuses of recruitment indicates a fragmented cultural political economy of labour migration: while competition state logics shape the economic imaginary of ‘high-skilled global labour competiveness’, other logics dominate the imaginaries of ‘skilled national labour shortages’, and ‘lower skilled EU labour self-sufficiency’. Findings indicate limits to competition state theory in explaining labour migration policy, demonstrate the weight of competing state projects, and highlight the powerful role of semiotic political ordering processes in coping with policy tensions.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/1437019/Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cultural_political_economy_of_European_labour_migration_policies","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2012-02-26T19:13:48.677-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":52190274,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190274/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2012_Paul_CPE_of_LabMig_CPS.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190274/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cult.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52190274/2012_Paul_CPE_of_LabMig_CPS-libre.pdf?1489763123=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DLimits_of_the_competition_state_The_cult.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=Mhqo6DcWl2X~S9qom~LAt2d5vXQlC-Jr5V9V7DVM2Xj00qukyHQBzZQCd~nkhzTaejL82WR-sIrE3PtXhOom-J3hQf2AbogMfgQeXaZkDZNyIvPbJJ069xEWhU2rTNmgDgjFSsGnsbijUTycvrPSfinQwKLhQdQQnw8CeL9WlCo5-tbCUTtQV1fwLX0RZiXJBEZRZCyTD0UcmA9xjmZuQpU4T-3yjydcUjfOA8hFVA4LhIeh-ZH857DUMoJ3SBQV-zrv3QTzPuwqlaWK0D0iE1O9g1rT8Qmo2l~gN-sybe4fYKobdzYAiqUX6rA56kTiYEt2onTEkPM4ZYUZMac4Cw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cultural_political_economy_of_European_labour_migration_policies","translated_slug":"","page_count":24,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":52190274,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52190274/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2012_Paul_CPE_of_LabMig_CPS.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52190274/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Limits_of_the_competition_state_The_cult.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52190274/2012_Paul_CPE_of_LabMig_CPS-libre.pdf?1489763123=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DLimits_of_the_competition_state_The_cult.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=Mhqo6DcWl2X~S9qom~LAt2d5vXQlC-Jr5V9V7DVM2Xj00qukyHQBzZQCd~nkhzTaejL82WR-sIrE3PtXhOom-J3hQf2AbogMfgQeXaZkDZNyIvPbJJ069xEWhU2rTNmgDgjFSsGnsbijUTycvrPSfinQwKLhQdQQnw8CeL9WlCo5-tbCUTtQV1fwLX0RZiXJBEZRZCyTD0UcmA9xjmZuQpU4T-3yjydcUjfOA8hFVA4LhIeh-ZH857DUMoJ3SBQV-zrv3QTzPuwqlaWK0D0iE1O9g1rT8Qmo2l~gN-sybe4fYKobdzYAiqUX6rA56kTiYEt2onTEkPM4ZYUZMac4Cw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":6276,"name":"International Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/International_Political_Economy"},{"id":6359,"name":"Comparative Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Comparative_Political_Economy"},{"id":7313,"name":"Labor Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Labor_Migration"},{"id":10214,"name":"Interpretive policy analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Interpretive_policy_analysis"},{"id":15884,"name":"Cultural Political Economy","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Cultural_Political_Economy"}],"urls":[{"id":1781765,"url":"http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/cNQzqCUIsKHJwzKMa2Rw/full"}]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1437041"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437041/The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1437041/The_struggle_for_coherence_in_EU_migration_governance_Il_difficile_percorso_verso_la_coerenza_nella_governance_Ue_della_migrazione_">The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>La Rivista delle Politiche Sociali (Italian …</span><span>, Jan 1, 2010</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range of policies, narratives, definitions and processes for governing migration, and in particular for the insertion of new governing logics and relationships under the heading of ‘new immigration policy’. The struggle to assert a coherent governance regime in the field of migration involves combining and re-combining (assembling) different policy narratives, institutional assumptions and relationships within the EU, and between EU and member states. These range across narratives of (human) rights, security, economic needs, and social inclusion all of which intersect in various ways and create tensions between them. In its attempt to cohere these narratives, the EU does not only create a new policy terrain but it also supports its legitimate claim to govern this terrain in a particular framework of sense-making.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437041"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437041"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437041; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437041]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437041]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437041; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437041']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437041, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437041]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437041,"title":"The struggle for coherence in EU migration governance (Il difficile percorso verso la coerenza nella governance Ue della migrazione)","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Within the EU, there is currently an explicit struggle to articulate and render coherent a range of policies, narratives, definitions and processes for governing migration, and in particular for the insertion of new governing logics and relationships under the heading of ‘new immigration policy’. 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Zhyznomirska)</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="be983ed97a08868aaedc56bf935b2057" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55492038,&quot;asset_id&quot;:35623725,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55492038/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="35623725"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="35623725"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623725; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623725]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623725]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623725; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='35623725']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 35623725, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "be983ed97a08868aaedc56bf935b2057" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=35623725]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":35623725,"title":"Risk Analysis as a Governance Tool in European Border Control","translated_title":"","metadata":{"publication_date":{"day":null,"month":null,"year":2018,"errors":{}},"publication_name":"Routledge Handbook on the Politics of Migration in Europe (edited by Weinar, A., Bonjour, S., Siegel, M. and L. 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Rijken and T. de Lange)</span><span>, 2018</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rat...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rather intuitively take for granted regulatory distinctions. This includes schisms such as EU free movers vs. workers from outside the EU or high-skilled vs. low-skilled migrant workers but also a relative acceptance of the different rights regimes applying across categories of migrant worker. This chapter challenges physically biased notions of borders, often featuring in migration policy research, as territorial demarcation lines which lose their effectiveness when migrants cross them without authorization. Instead, migration governance is conceptualized as a border-drawing activity by which migrants are classified and thus constructed as ‘legal’ or ‘illegal’ in highly selective and structurally embedded processes of meaning-making. The chapter forges a conceptual hub for critically unpacking the normative underbelly of regulatory distinctions of migrant workers in European migration governance and for discussing how such deeply political distinctions fashion (exploitable) positions for low-waged migrant workers.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="efe16d879a609c86005e11cffc0d7bed" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55491966,&quot;asset_id&quot;:35623651,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55491966/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="35623651"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="35623651"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623651; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623651]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=35623651]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 35623651; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='35623651']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 35623651, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "efe16d879a609c86005e11cffc0d7bed" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=35623651]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":35623651,"title":"How low-skilled migrant workers are made: border-drawing in migration policy","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"When discussing labour migration governance in Europe, many observers – including academics – rather intuitively take for granted regulatory distinctions. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="29843321"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843321/Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation_and_Governance_Research"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk: New Issue or New Tool in Regulation and Governance Research?" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52250130/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843321/Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation_and_Governance_Research">Risk: New Issue or New Tool in Regulation and Governance Research?</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change?</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Risk has been a prime carrier of novelty claims in social sciences studies on societal decision-m...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Risk has been a prime carrier of novelty claims in social sciences studies on societal decision-making over the last couple of decades. Yet, in addition to the conceptual ambiguities associated with regulation and governance more generally discussed in this volume, conceptualizations of risk have been equally ambiguous. Some see risks as intrinsically unstable ever emerging regulatory problems, others discuss the need to develop ever new regulatory tools and governance arrangements to deal with risk complexity, yet others see risk as a new regulatory heuristic which can itself contribute a new “lens through which to view the world” (Bridget Hutter) in regulation and governance. As an effect, research exchange across conceptual and analytical barriers is greatly hampered. This contribution examines the use of risk concepts in regulation and governance studies with the dual aim of a) mapping and evaluating analytical cleavages, and b) establishing the potential for exchange about new modes of intentional societal change beyond such cleavages. It hence also sets the terrain for the volume’s subsequent two empirical chapters. Based on a comprehensive conceptual review of existing research the chapter identifies a four-fold distinction of analytical approaches which is shaped by variation across two dimensions: the conceptualization of intervention (as information-theoretical or decision-theoretical) and the analytical relationship between risk and political decision-making (risk as issue or tool for interventions). The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk regulation – are discussed and compared in-depth to inform a discussion of the value and limits of the resulting division of research labour and respective novelty claims.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="483463d353b93ecd841fe0ce142baf4a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:52250130,&quot;asset_id&quot;:29843321,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52250130/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843321"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843321"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843321; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843321]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843321]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843321; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843321']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843321, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "483463d353b93ecd841fe0ce142baf4a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843321]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843321,"title":"Risk: New Issue or New Tool in Regulation and Governance Research?","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Risk has been a prime carrier of novelty claims in social sciences studies on societal decision-making over the last couple of decades. 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Some see risks as intrinsically unstable ever emerging regulatory problems, others discuss the need to develop ever new regulatory tools and governance arrangements to deal with risk complexity, yet others see risk as a new regulatory heuristic which can itself contribute a new “lens through which to view the world” (Bridget Hutter) in regulation and governance. As an effect, research exchange across conceptual and analytical barriers is greatly hampered. This contribution examines the use of risk concepts in regulation and governance studies with the dual aim of a) mapping and evaluating analytical cleavages, and b) establishing the potential for exchange about new modes of intentional societal change beyond such cleavages. It hence also sets the terrain for the volume’s subsequent two empirical chapters. Based on a comprehensive conceptual review of existing research the chapter identifies a four-fold distinction of analytical approaches which is shaped by variation across two dimensions: the conceptualization of intervention (as information-theoretical or decision-theoretical) and the analytical relationship between risk and political decision-making (risk as issue or tool for interventions). The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk regulation – are discussed and compared in-depth to inform a discussion of the value and limits of the resulting division of research labour and respective novelty claims.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/29843321/Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation_and_Governance_Research","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2016-11-14T23:30:34.496-08:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"other","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":52250130,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52250130/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2017_Paul_Risk_regulation_and_governance_SRG_volume.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52250130/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52250130/2017_Paul_Risk_regulation_and_governance_SRG_volume-libre.pdf?1490169338=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DRisk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=D6trDm7aKOga~9Pigbtiv7Aqwk5AuizLBcNmlxfw7plAdkoP~l75lVxCxfNJTpjQuXhJyTxz7WLFBbbW~TK9HjyTs1mpzccwwhhpaQW3-CnABFuLs~cucpzo2a0XG1zQTqHXEM620XaKXNVgtuF4FCcUpRQs3woaHR5HBGF1TPTt-meBt7FVpM1DI6Fc5i2RpN6REzqx6BFRuy3lkSlx9zP0Ryjn4MonwvTcKjBQFgXUkGVaTwWFuGJB7zm0ZjgG6nfUL6XTk9Gk6a87Lai-Rr9yFen-RXeId8A6XucTuAmS8COPum3p-3-6GvWtFBVVQkKrY42lOjulJUFMTVDsVw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation_and_Governance_Research","translated_slug":"","page_count":20,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":52250130,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/52250130/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"2017_Paul_Risk_regulation_and_governance_SRG_volume.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/52250130/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Risk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/52250130/2017_Paul_Risk_regulation_and_governance_SRG_volume-libre.pdf?1490169338=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DRisk_New_Issue_or_New_Tool_in_Regulation.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059210\u0026Signature=D6trDm7aKOga~9Pigbtiv7Aqwk5AuizLBcNmlxfw7plAdkoP~l75lVxCxfNJTpjQuXhJyTxz7WLFBbbW~TK9HjyTs1mpzccwwhhpaQW3-CnABFuLs~cucpzo2a0XG1zQTqHXEM620XaKXNVgtuF4FCcUpRQs3woaHR5HBGF1TPTt-meBt7FVpM1DI6Fc5i2RpN6REzqx6BFRuy3lkSlx9zP0Ryjn4MonwvTcKjBQFgXUkGVaTwWFuGJB7zm0ZjgG6nfUL6XTk9Gk6a87Lai-Rr9yFen-RXeId8A6XucTuAmS8COPum3p-3-6GvWtFBVVQkKrY42lOjulJUFMTVDsVw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":3996,"name":"Risk Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Governance"},{"id":5056,"name":"Risk regulation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_regulation"},{"id":1223646,"name":"Governance and Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Governance_and_Risk_Management"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="29843309"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843309/Society_Regulation_and_Governance_New_Modes_of_Social_Change_An_Introduction"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change? An Introduction" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/55491891/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/29843309/Society_Regulation_and_Governance_New_Modes_of_Social_Change_An_Introduction">Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change? An Introduction</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-mainz.academia.edu/MarcM%C3%B6lders">Marc Mölders</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change?</span><span>, 2017</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="c6245363cd254a015ddefd8164323594" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:55491891,&quot;asset_id&quot;:29843309,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/55491891/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMCw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="29843309"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="29843309"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843309; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843309]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=29843309]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 29843309; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='29843309']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 29843309, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "c6245363cd254a015ddefd8164323594" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=29843309]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":29843309,"title":"Society, Regulation and Governance: New Modes of Social Change? 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By scrutinsing the relationship between labour migration policies (LMP) and welfare states in Germany and France, the chapter draws a comparative counterpoint to migration in the Scandinavian universal welfare state context. <br />From a welfare regime perspective economic utility rationales entailed in migration policies should coincide relatively smoothly with Bismarckian social insurance model and entitlement logics. While this claim seems valid at first glance, our empirical analysis exposes that different policy contexts in Germany and France trigger a highly variable usage, meaning and political contestation of Bismarckian entitlement logics. The German example showcases that Bismarckian pathways of &#39;deserved&#39; and &#39;earned&#39; socio-economic inclusion can be amplified in LMP in an environment where economic selectivity of migrant workers does not seem to clash with the norms of citizenship. In the French case, however, post-colonialism, Republican citizenship and related notions of belonging directly conflict with the attempt to use Bismarckian entitlement logics in labour admissions governance and explain the continued fierce political struggles over &#39;immigration choisie&#39;. <br />The chapter thus indicates that the possibilities for what we label ‘governance of context’ are highly bounded. They are delimited by the political acceptability of re-constituting the very foundations of the citizenship model through LMP. Eventually, context does not just matter as a passive container within which policies operate; it is an active and constantly re-shaped component of political struggles over migration policymaking.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="3a5c84efc07353b037a18e2d3fd8d8e4" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:31405519,&quot;asset_id&quot;:1437048,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/31405519/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1437048"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1437048"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437048; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437048]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1437048]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1437048; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1437048']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1437048, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "3a5c84efc07353b037a18e2d3fd8d8e4" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1437048]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1437048,"title":"Managing Diverse Policy Contexts: The Welfare State as Repertoire of Policy Logics in German and French Labour Migration Governance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This chapter examines the relationship between welfare states and migration from a critical political economy perspective, arguing that welfare states serve as repertoire of policy logics which are employed strategically in initial migrant admissions to serve specific selectivity goals and manage the wider policy context. By scrutinsing the relationship between labour migration policies (LMP) and welfare states in Germany and France, the chapter draws a comparative counterpoint to migration in the Scandinavian universal welfare state context. \r\nFrom a welfare regime perspective economic utility rationales entailed in migration policies should coincide relatively smoothly with Bismarckian social insurance model and entitlement logics. While this claim seems valid at first glance, our empirical analysis exposes that different policy contexts in Germany and France trigger a highly variable usage, meaning and political contestation of Bismarckian entitlement logics. The German example showcases that Bismarckian pathways of 'deserved' and 'earned' socio-economic inclusion can be amplified in LMP in an environment where economic selectivity of migrant workers does not seem to clash with the norms of citizenship. In the French case, however, post-colonialism, Republican citizenship and related notions of belonging directly conflict with the attempt to use Bismarckian entitlement logics in labour admissions governance and explain the continued fierce political struggles over 'immigration choisie'. \r\nThe chapter thus indicates that the possibilities for what we label ‘governance of context’ are highly bounded. They are delimited by the political acceptability of re-constituting the very foundations of the citizenship model through LMP. Eventually, context does not just matter as a passive container within which policies operate; it is an active and constantly re-shaped component of political struggles over migration policymaking.","more_info":"In: Vad Jønsson, H., Onasch, L., Pellander, S. and M. Wickstrom (eds.) 2013: Migrations and welfare states: Policies, discourses and institutions. NordWel Studies in Historical Welfare State Research 3, Helsinki, pp. 138-173"},"translated_abstract":"This chapter examines the relationship between welfare states and migration from a critical political economy perspective, arguing that welfare states serve as repertoire of policy logics which are employed strategically in initial migrant admissions to serve specific selectivity goals and manage the wider policy context. By scrutinsing the relationship between labour migration policies (LMP) and welfare states in Germany and France, the chapter draws a comparative counterpoint to migration in the Scandinavian universal welfare state context. \r\nFrom a welfare regime perspective economic utility rationales entailed in migration policies should coincide relatively smoothly with Bismarckian social insurance model and entitlement logics. While this claim seems valid at first glance, our empirical analysis exposes that different policy contexts in Germany and France trigger a highly variable usage, meaning and political contestation of Bismarckian entitlement logics. The German example showcases that Bismarckian pathways of 'deserved' and 'earned' socio-economic inclusion can be amplified in LMP in an environment where economic selectivity of migrant workers does not seem to clash with the norms of citizenship. In the French case, however, post-colonialism, Republican citizenship and related notions of belonging directly conflict with the attempt to use Bismarckian entitlement logics in labour admissions governance and explain the continued fierce political struggles over 'immigration choisie'. \r\nThe chapter thus indicates that the possibilities for what we label ‘governance of context’ are highly bounded. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1436935"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436935/Differential_inclusion_in_Germanys_conservative_welfare_state_policy_legacies_and_structural_constraints"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Differential inclusion in Germany&#39;s conservative welfare state: policy legacies and structural constraints" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436935/Differential_inclusion_in_Germanys_conservative_welfare_state_policy_legacies_and_structural_constraints">Differential inclusion in Germany&#39;s conservative welfare state: policy legacies and structural constraints</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>Migration and welfare in the new Europe: …</span><span>, Jan 1, 2011</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The German welfare state and its emphasis on status maintenance seem to cement migrants&amp;amp;amp;#...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The German welfare state and its emphasis on status maintenance seem to cement migrants&amp;amp;amp;#x27; worse socio-economic position, and contribute to their exclusion. 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Little is known, however, about their varied mutual interactions. This article addresses that gap by examining the coevolution of workers&#39; compensation and occupational safety regulation in Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands. Drawing on an extensive international analysis of primary documents, secondary literature, and interviews with regulator, insurance, business, and labor representatives, the article identifies strikingly varied but stable national preferences for: (a) the use of financial versus regulatory instruments and (b) the allocation of regulatory responsibilities between state and nonstate actors. The article presents a novel explanation of that variation as dependent on the relative coherence of interactions between the particular cost-control logics of welfare provision and wider norms and traditions of state action in each country.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="93c38f89e5df86f41b03f04c6e57d054" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:61906667,&quot;asset_id&quot;:41750054,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/61906667/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="41750054"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="41750054"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 41750054; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=41750054]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=41750054]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 41750054; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='41750054']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 41750054, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "93c38f89e5df86f41b03f04c6e57d054" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=41750054]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":41750054,"title":"The boundary conditions for regulation: Welfare systems, state traditions, and the varied governance of work safety in Europe","translated_title":"","metadata":{"doi":"10.1111/gove.12411","abstract":"Studies of the relationship between the welfare and regulatory state have hitherto either focused on the latter displacing the former, or presented regulation as an alternative means for achieving welfare goals. 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dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="34515104"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/34515104/Varieties_of_risk_regulation_in_Europe_coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Varieties of risk regulation in Europe: coordination, complementarity and occupational safety in capitalist welfare states" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/54380185/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/34515104/Varieties_of_risk_regulation_in_Europe_coordination_complementarity_and_occupational_safety_in_capitalist_welfare_states">Varieties of risk regulation in Europe: coordination, complementarity and occupational safety in capitalist welfare states</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://kcl.academia.edu/HenryRothstein">Henry Rothstein</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://kcl.academia.edu/DavidDemeritt">David Demeritt</a>, <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a>, and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-bielefeld.academia.edu/MichaelHuber">Michael Huber</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This article tests the extent to which the organization and stringency of occupational health and...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This article tests the extent to which the organization and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. While the UK explicitly sanctions risk-cost-benefit trade-offs, other European countries mandate ambitious safety goals. That contrast appears to reflect cleavages identified in the Varieties of Capitalism literature, which suggests worker protection regimes are stronger in coordinated market economies than in liberal market economies. Our analysis of Germany, France, UK and the Netherlands, shows that the varied organization of their regulatory regimes is explained through a three-way complementarity with their welfare systems and modes of coordination. However, despite varied headline goals, we find no systematic differences in the stringency of those countries&#39; regulatory protections insofar as they all make trade-offs on safety. Instead, the explicitness, rationalizations and logics of trade-offs vary according to each country&#39;s legal system, state tradition and coupling between regulation and welfare system.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="1005f4d52b55566ed733c43534af092a" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:54380185,&quot;asset_id&quot;:34515104,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/54380185/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="34515104"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="34515104"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 34515104; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=34515104]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=34515104]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 34515104; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='34515104']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 34515104, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "1005f4d52b55566ed733c43534af092a" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=34515104]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":34515104,"title":"Varieties of risk regulation in Europe: coordination, complementarity and occupational safety in capitalist welfare states","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This article tests the extent to which the organization and stringency of occupational health and safety regulation complements the dominant mode of coordination in the political economy. 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href="https://www.academia.edu/34109118/_Still_shaping_society_On_novelty_claims_in_regulation_and_governance"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of (Still) shaping society: On novelty claims in regulation and governance" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/54040021/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/34109118/_Still_shaping_society_On_novelty_claims_in_regulation_and_governance">(Still) shaping society: On novelty claims in regulation and governance</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--coauthors"><span>by </span><span><a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul">Regine Paul</a> and <a class="" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-authors" href="https://uni-mainz.academia.edu/MarcM%C3%B6lders">Marc Mölders</a></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Questions about whether and how society can be shaped by political interventions date back to ear...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Questions about whether and how society can be shaped by political interventions date back to early treatises on government by Aristotle, Machiavelli and other State philosophers. They have not lost their appeal in the context of multiple contemporary crises and the attempts to deal with them (e.g., refugees, the financial markets, terrorism). Social Scientists have produced countless claims about new instruments, new tools, new goals, new actors, new arenas and new procedures involved in such attempts at shaping society. Can a revised methodology of assessing systemic risks help predict and avoid financial market crashes in the future? Are novel forms of international co-operation, including so-called partnerships with countries in North Africa, a solution in the so-called refugee crisis? To what extent can the use of algorithms help identify terrorists before the idea of killing someone ever crosses their minds? Does ex-post criminal conviction become superfluous then? Are new social media an answer to the crisis of representative democracy as well as helping to overcome authoritarian regimes?</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="331369c87c36d455cb0d25eaac41a3e0" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:54040021,&quot;asset_id&quot;:34109118,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/54040021/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="34109118"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="34109118"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 34109118; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=34109118]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=34109118]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 34109118; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='34109118']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 34109118, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "331369c87c36d455cb0d25eaac41a3e0" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=34109118]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":34109118,"title":"(Still) shaping society: On novelty claims in regulation and governance","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Questions about whether and how society can be shaped by political interventions date back to early treatises on government by Aristotle, Machiavelli and other State philosophers. 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="11629690"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/11629690/Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governance_research"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Risk concepts in regulation and governance research" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/11629690/Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governance_research">Risk concepts in regulation and governance research</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span>draft chapter for an edited volume</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">Risk concepts have gained much attention in social sciences studies on societal decision-making p...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">Risk concepts have gained much attention in social sciences studies on societal decision-making processes over the last couple of decades. Yet, in addition to the conceptual ambiguities associated with regulation and governance more generally discussed in this edited volume, conceptualizations of risk have been equally ambivalent. This contribution examines the use of risk concepts in regulation and governance studies with the dual aim of a) mapping and evaluating analytical cleavages, and b) establishing the potential for exchange beyond such cleavages. We identify a four-fold distinction of analytical approaches in the literature which is shaped by variation across two dimensions. Firstly, there is a cleavage between to respective conceptualizations of interventions – from more instrumental regulatory approaches to broader governance accounts of participatory decision-making – which confirms more general findings of this volume. Secondly, framings of the analytical relationship between risk and public decision-making vary considerably, too. They range from information-theoretical approaches which treat risk as manageable events on which only ‘good enough’ information needs to be acquired, to those who consider risk from a decision-theoretical perspective and see it as a heuristic device for decision-making itself. The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk(-based) regulation – are reviewed one by one to inform a discussion of the value and limits of this division of research labour.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="e9b2821bc871d0021e0470dacc6b1792" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:37096604,&quot;asset_id&quot;:11629690,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/37096604/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="11629690"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="11629690"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 11629690; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=11629690]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=11629690]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 11629690; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='11629690']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 11629690, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "e9b2821bc871d0021e0470dacc6b1792" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=11629690]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":11629690,"title":"Risk concepts in regulation and governance research","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"Risk concepts have gained much attention in social sciences studies on societal decision-making processes over the last couple of decades. 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They range from information-theoretical approaches which treat risk as manageable events on which only ‘good enough’ information needs to be acquired, to those who consider risk from a decision-theoretical perspective and see it as a heuristic device for decision-making itself. The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk(-based) regulation – are reviewed one by one to inform a discussion of the value and limits of this division of research labour.\r\n","ai_title_tag":"Analyzing Risk Concepts in Regulation and Governance Studies","publication_name":"draft chapter for an edited volume"},"translated_abstract":"Risk concepts have gained much attention in social sciences studies on societal decision-making processes over the last couple of decades. 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They range from information-theoretical approaches which treat risk as manageable events on which only ‘good enough’ information needs to be acquired, to those who consider risk from a decision-theoretical perspective and see it as a heuristic device for decision-making itself. The emerging approaches – risk regulation, risk governance, risk-based regulation and the governance analysis of risk(-based) regulation – are reviewed one by one to inform a discussion of the value and limits of this division of research labour.\r\n","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/11629690/Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governance_research","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2015-03-24T04:28:09.598-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":37096604,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Risk_in_regulation_and_governance_studies.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/37096604/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governan.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/37096604/Risk_in_regulation_and_governance_studies-libre.pdf?1427196515=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DRisk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governan.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059211\u0026Signature=Ha-SQiwuMO8pD7sDzc7iHZYp-NX~ilgJk4ZXOJ6PadRvx05EYtFwx1U5u3QR-hws5FpIW4a3Nrpr7L63OptVumtWpDTfRAbmTCeY2-YRwtBBfQIx0Vxxm~U9UhLJskVfPFc-6K47mYt-5XSt2yBgCrL8k~tVBrHtG4~ynCFcV7ETElATFymNhx8vp4YFCmrVwyf5lXtjHUHkyvPR1HH6~OLbqzf6NP9GBWDn7NyYx0n1exA8~87ez8-uFqwwqKst0TurBoMZs8Xbhq4sapXG7W1f504hb2mTNdt7ajsP-dyvrPF9mnUdxaO6C56qKfTjaNrwXh5Q3uxTUogthYBRFw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governance_research","translated_slug":"","page_count":19,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":37096604,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg","file_name":"Risk_in_regulation_and_governance_studies.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/37096604/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Risk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governan.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/37096604/Risk_in_regulation_and_governance_studies-libre.pdf?1427196515=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DRisk_concepts_in_regulation_and_governan.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059211\u0026Signature=Ha-SQiwuMO8pD7sDzc7iHZYp-NX~ilgJk4ZXOJ6PadRvx05EYtFwx1U5u3QR-hws5FpIW4a3Nrpr7L63OptVumtWpDTfRAbmTCeY2-YRwtBBfQIx0Vxxm~U9UhLJskVfPFc-6K47mYt-5XSt2yBgCrL8k~tVBrHtG4~ynCFcV7ETElATFymNhx8vp4YFCmrVwyf5lXtjHUHkyvPR1HH6~OLbqzf6NP9GBWDn7NyYx0n1exA8~87ez8-uFqwwqKst0TurBoMZs8Xbhq4sapXG7W1f504hb2mTNdt7ajsP-dyvrPF9mnUdxaO6C56qKfTjaNrwXh5Q3uxTUogthYBRFw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":1561,"name":"Regulatory Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Regulatory_Governance"},{"id":3287,"name":"Regulation And Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Regulation_And_Governance"},{"id":3996,"name":"Risk Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Governance"},{"id":5056,"name":"Risk regulation","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_regulation"},{"id":5167,"name":"Governance","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Governance"},{"id":50711,"name":"Risk Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_Analysis"},{"id":591344,"name":"Risk and crisis management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Risk_and_crisis_management"},{"id":1223646,"name":"Governance and Risk Management","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Governance_and_Risk_Management"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); $(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="3807563"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/3807563/Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border_drawing_Methodological_reflections_on_the_interpretive_analysis_of_policy_rationalities"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Migration policies as meaningful &#39;border-drawing&#39;: Methodological reflections on the interpretive analysis of policy rationalities" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://attachments.academia-assets.com/36769769/thumbnails/1.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/3807563/Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border_drawing_Methodological_reflections_on_the_interpretive_analysis_of_policy_rationalities">Migration policies as meaningful &#39;border-drawing&#39;: Methodological reflections on the interpretive analysis of policy rationalities</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">This paper offers a conceptual and methodological contribution to international migration researc...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">This paper offers a conceptual and methodological contribution to international migration research from a political sociology perspective. It conceptualizes migration policy as border-drawing activities and carves out a methodological toolbox to investigate the policy rationalities behind those. The paper first problematizes the conceptual limits of dominant ‘control gap’ perspectives in international migration policy research as biased towards physical and dichotomous border concepts. Instead, a Bourdieusian reading of migration policy is proposed to capture how states draw borders between various ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ positions for migrants with important rights implications. This conceptual innovation feeds into a wider methodological reflection. As border-drawing is guided by specific normative assumptions about who should count as ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ and why, migration policies are best captured with the tools offered by interpretive policy analysis. Based on empirical insights from a larger comparative study of European labor migration policies, the paper illustrates how normative foundations of border-drawing can be reconstructed systematically by examining policy rationalities. Finally, the paper evaluates both analytical value and pitfalls of the proposed joint-venture of the political sociology concept of border-drawing and an interpretive-reconstructive methodology for migration policy analysis. Overall, the article promotes an explicit integration of conceptual innovation in international migration research with critical reflections about its methodological implications.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><a id="20637bd57170073bf4ded6406d4568bf" class="wp-workCard--action" rel="nofollow" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-download" data-download="{&quot;attachment_id&quot;:36769769,&quot;asset_id&quot;:3807563,&quot;asset_type&quot;:&quot;Work&quot;,&quot;button_location&quot;:&quot;profile&quot;}" href="https://www.academia.edu/attachments/36769769/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&s=profile"><span><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></span><span>Download</span></a><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="3807563"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="3807563"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 3807563; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=3807563]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=3807563]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 3807563; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='3807563']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 3807563, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (true){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "20637bd57170073bf4ded6406d4568bf" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=3807563]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":3807563,"title":"Migration policies as meaningful 'border-drawing': Methodological reflections on the interpretive analysis of policy rationalities","translated_title":"","metadata":{"abstract":"This paper offers a conceptual and methodological contribution to international migration research from a political sociology perspective. It conceptualizes migration policy as border-drawing activities and carves out a methodological toolbox to investigate the policy rationalities behind those. The paper first problematizes the conceptual limits of dominant ‘control gap’ perspectives in international migration policy research as biased towards physical and dichotomous border concepts. Instead, a Bourdieusian reading of migration policy is proposed to capture how states draw borders between various ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ positions for migrants with important rights implications. This conceptual innovation feeds into a wider methodological reflection. As border-drawing is guided by specific normative assumptions about who should count as ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ and why, migration policies are best captured with the tools offered by interpretive policy analysis. Based on empirical insights from a larger comparative study of European labor migration policies, the paper illustrates how normative foundations of border-drawing can be reconstructed systematically by examining policy rationalities. Finally, the paper evaluates both analytical value and pitfalls of the proposed joint-venture of the political sociology concept of border-drawing and an interpretive-reconstructive methodology for migration policy analysis. Overall, the article promotes an explicit integration of conceptual innovation in international migration research with critical reflections about its methodological implications.","more_info":"Unpublished conference paper presented at the \"Interpretive Policy Analysis\" 8th annual conference, Vienna University, 3-5 July 2013, panel organised by Helen Schwenken and Ilker Atac"},"translated_abstract":"This paper offers a conceptual and methodological contribution to international migration research from a political sociology perspective. It conceptualizes migration policy as border-drawing activities and carves out a methodological toolbox to investigate the policy rationalities behind those. The paper first problematizes the conceptual limits of dominant ‘control gap’ perspectives in international migration policy research as biased towards physical and dichotomous border concepts. Instead, a Bourdieusian reading of migration policy is proposed to capture how states draw borders between various ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ positions for migrants with important rights implications. This conceptual innovation feeds into a wider methodological reflection. As border-drawing is guided by specific normative assumptions about who should count as ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’ and why, migration policies are best captured with the tools offered by interpretive policy analysis. Based on empirical insights from a larger comparative study of European labor migration policies, the paper illustrates how normative foundations of border-drawing can be reconstructed systematically by examining policy rationalities. Finally, the paper evaluates both analytical value and pitfalls of the proposed joint-venture of the political sociology concept of border-drawing and an interpretive-reconstructive methodology for migration policy analysis. Overall, the article promotes an explicit integration of conceptual innovation in international migration research with critical reflections about its methodological implications.","internal_url":"https://www.academia.edu/3807563/Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border_drawing_Methodological_reflections_on_the_interpretive_analysis_of_policy_rationalities","translated_internal_url":"","created_at":"2013-06-27T20:41:51.196-07:00","preview_url":null,"current_user_can_edit":null,"current_user_is_owner":null,"owner_id":1245262,"coauthors_can_edit":true,"document_type":"paper","co_author_tags":[],"downloadable_attachments":[{"id":36769769,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/36769769/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Migration_Policy_as_Border-Drawing.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/36769769/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/36769769/Migration_Policy_as_Border-Drawing-libre.pdf?1424880525=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMigration_policies_as_meaningful_border.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059211\u0026Signature=NU9yRYy2VEH1m5vmIXpZCPpxfvzZopa6HLo32jLaulQMcVrkCuBK5hRljfUNEONo3dzTXCLCd2ryeBTada-thVlEr0gCUuaVuk0zAcOAgwp8jCMk9KASKonM-JH4m5ET07aKK5mQ5og8rszf0-Y1FIjfGG6kYhio9UHlgZdt5Cf0nazHr02ghpDF1qnSYH2WSQ4AxQHiQeKjaz1pb1zZxiIOsSGR-ftCktzPqj9ectN1BnIUXDCPuw4ESyhG-NrnwNRlAK~eXqf-kCR4sXfBnc1cw24qSAcvQfB3Xh1UBX5KMLQXEEtgcAr-yPovsn3zDdLNeTwaX0FEOWcoYFd5pw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"slug":"Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border_drawing_Methodological_reflections_on_the_interpretive_analysis_of_policy_rationalities","translated_slug":"","page_count":24,"language":"en","content_type":"Work","owner":{"id":1245262,"first_name":"Regine","middle_initials":"","last_name":"Paul","page_name":"ReginePaul","domain_name":"harvard","created_at":"2012-02-26T18:54:25.822-08:00","display_name":"Regine Paul","url":"https://harvard.academia.edu/ReginePaul"},"attachments":[{"id":36769769,"title":"","file_type":"pdf","scribd_thumbnail_url":"https://attachments.academia-assets.com/36769769/thumbnails/1.jpg","file_name":"Migration_Policy_as_Border-Drawing.pdf","download_url":"https://www.academia.edu/attachments/36769769/download_file?st=MTczMzA1NTYxMSw4LjIyMi4yMDguMTQ2&","bulk_download_file_name":"Migration_policies_as_meaningful_border.pdf","bulk_download_url":"https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/36769769/Migration_Policy_as_Border-Drawing-libre.pdf?1424880525=\u0026response-content-disposition=attachment%3B+filename%3DMigration_policies_as_meaningful_border.pdf\u0026Expires=1733059211\u0026Signature=NU9yRYy2VEH1m5vmIXpZCPpxfvzZopa6HLo32jLaulQMcVrkCuBK5hRljfUNEONo3dzTXCLCd2ryeBTada-thVlEr0gCUuaVuk0zAcOAgwp8jCMk9KASKonM-JH4m5ET07aKK5mQ5og8rszf0-Y1FIjfGG6kYhio9UHlgZdt5Cf0nazHr02ghpDF1qnSYH2WSQ4AxQHiQeKjaz1pb1zZxiIOsSGR-ftCktzPqj9ectN1BnIUXDCPuw4ESyhG-NrnwNRlAK~eXqf-kCR4sXfBnc1cw24qSAcvQfB3Xh1UBX5KMLQXEEtgcAr-yPovsn3zDdLNeTwaX0FEOWcoYFd5pw__\u0026Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA"}],"research_interests":[{"id":10212,"name":"Interpretive research methodology","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Interpretive_research_methodology"},{"id":10214,"name":"Interpretive policy analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Interpretive_policy_analysis"},{"id":13340,"name":"Pierre Bourdieu","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Pierre_Bourdieu"},{"id":14730,"name":"Migration Studies","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Migration_Studies"},{"id":19051,"name":"Transnational Labour Migration","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Transnational_Labour_Migration"},{"id":29841,"name":"Public Policy Analysis","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Public_Policy_Analysis"},{"id":242066,"name":"Pierre Bourdieu and symbolic violence","url":"https://www.academia.edu/Documents/in/Pierre_Bourdieu_and_symbolic_violence"}],"urls":[]}, dispatcherData: dispatcherData }); 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$(this).data('initialized', true); } }); $a.trackClickSource(".js-work-strip-work-link", "profile_work_strip") }); </script> <div class="js-work-strip profile--work_container" data-work-id="1436937"><div class="profile--work_thumbnail hidden-xs"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-thumbnail" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436937/Yet_another_tool_for_growth_Labour_migration_policy_and_varieties_of_capitalism_in_France_and_Germany"><img alt="Research paper thumbnail of Yet another &#39;tool for growth&#39;? Labour migration policy and varieties of capitalism in France and Germany" class="work-thumbnail" src="https://a.academia-assets.com/images/blank-paper.jpg" /></a></div><div class="wp-workCard wp-workCard_itemContainer"><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--title"><a class="js-work-strip-work-link text-gray-darker" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-title" href="https://www.academia.edu/1436937/Yet_another_tool_for_growth_Labour_migration_policy_and_varieties_of_capitalism_in_France_and_Germany">Yet another &#39;tool for growth&#39;? Labour migration policy and varieties of capitalism in France and Germany</a></div><div class="wp-workCard_item"><span class="js-work-more-abstract-truncated">The saliency of international labour migration in the ‘competition state’ and a return to active ...</span><a class="js-work-more-abstract" data-broccoli-component="work_strip.more_abstract" data-click-track="profile-work-strip-more-abstract" href="javascript:;"><span> more </span><span><i class="fa fa-caret-down"></i></span></a><span class="js-work-more-abstract-untruncated hidden">The saliency of international labour migration in the ‘competition state’ and a return to active recruitment across the rich world challenges our understanding of national economic coordination processes. Departing from the Varieties of Capitalism (VoC) literature, this paper argues that labour reproduction cannot fully be captured in terms of national vocational education and training systems. Instead, we need to better understand to what extent policy forges foreign labour recruitment as yet another complement in a wider macro-economic competitiveness strategy. Evidence from document and interview analyses in France and Germany provokes ambivalent answers to this exploration. With regard to the beneficial treatment of high and specific skills entries, selection mechanisms for extra-EU migrant workers are clearly shaped by nationally distinct competitiveness strategies and narratives. They epitomise the aspirations of the ‘competition state’ bearing distinct characteristics of state-enhanced French and enabling German capitalism par excellence. The sectoral locus of foreign recruitment decisions in both countries and the specific German fixation on VET qualifications in admissions further follow well-studied economic coordination patterns. However, limits to non-EU labour entries for lower skills enforce a highly differential rights regime compared to high skilled entries. We observe a strong political demarcation of the ‘competition state’ logics in skilled and lower skilled segments, noticeably departing from orthodox economic coordination claims. This rests on a political imagination of a self-sufficient resident pool of labour, contained by domestic activation policy targets, EU free movement of labour, and, very distinctly in France, the management of a post-colonial resident population.</span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--actions"><span class="work-strip-bookmark-button-container"></span><span class="wp-workCard--action visible-if-viewed-by-owner inline-block" style="display: none;"><span class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper profile-work-strip-edit-button-wrapper" data-work-id="1436937"><a class="js-profile-work-strip-edit-button" tabindex="0"><span><i class="fa fa-pencil"></i></span><span>Edit</span></a></span></span><span id="work-strip-rankings-button-container"></span></div><div class="wp-workCard_item wp-workCard--stats"><span><span><span class="js-view-count view-count u-mr2x" data-work-id="1436937"><i class="fa fa-spinner fa-spin"></i></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436937; window.Academia.workViewCountsFetcher.queue(workId, function (count) { var description = window.$h.commaizeInt(count) + " " + window.$h.pluralize(count, 'View'); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436937]").text(description); $(".js-view-count[data-work-id=1436937]").attr('title', description).tooltip(); }); });</script></span></span><span><span class="percentile-widget hidden"><span class="u-mr2x work-percentile"></span></span><script>$(function () { var workId = 1436937; window.Academia.workPercentilesFetcher.queue(workId, function (percentileText) { var container = $(".js-work-strip[data-work-id='1436937']"); container.find('.work-percentile').text(percentileText.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + percentileText.slice(1)); container.find('.percentile-widget').show(); container.find('.percentile-widget').removeClass('hidden'); }); });</script></span><span><script>$(function() { new Works.PaperRankView({ workId: 1436937, container: "", }); });</script></span></div><div id="work-strip-premium-row-container"></div></div></div><script> require.config({ waitSeconds: 90 })(["https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/wow_profile-f77ea15d77ce96025a6048a514272ad8becbad23c641fc2b3bd6e24ca6ff1932.js","https://a.academia-assets.com/assets/work_edit-ad038b8c047c1a8d4fa01b402d530ff93c45fee2137a149a4a5398bc8ad67560.js"], function() { // from javascript_helper.rb var dispatcherData = {} if (false){ window.WowProfile.dispatcher = window.WowProfile.dispatcher || _.clone(Backbone.Events); dispatcherData = { dispatcher: window.WowProfile.dispatcher, downloadLinkId: "-1" } } $('.js-work-strip[data-work-id=1436937]').each(function() { if (!$(this).data('initialized')) { new WowProfile.WorkStripView({ el: this, workJSON: {"id":1436937,"title":"Yet another 'tool for growth'? 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With regard to the beneficial treatment of high and specific skills entries, selection mechanisms for extra-EU migrant workers are clearly shaped by nationally distinct competitiveness strategies and narratives. They epitomise the aspirations of the ‘competition state’ bearing distinct characteristics of state-enhanced French and enabling German capitalism par excellence. The sectoral locus of foreign recruitment decisions in both countries and the specific German fixation on VET qualifications in admissions further follow well-studied economic coordination patterns. However, limits to non-EU labour entries for lower skills enforce a highly differential rights regime compared to high skilled entries. We observe a strong political demarcation of the ‘competition state’ logics in skilled and lower skilled segments, noticeably departing from orthodox economic coordination claims. 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