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This book explores the response of Ireland’s political-administrative system to the implementation of environmental directives in the cases of waste management, water reform and biodiversity. Ireland represents the implementation challenges of a small EU member state with a weak background in environmental governance, and has struggled to adapt to the complexities of enforcing environmental rules. Using a theoretical framework inspired by traditional implementation analysis and insights from the Europeanisation literature, the book traces the implementation process in three directives. The main conclusion of this study is that Ireland’s implementation performance in waste management, water and nature conservation is influenced by the low issue salience of environmental policy and the need to overcome structural problems in the public administration system to give effect to EU legislation.This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 6, Clean water and sanitation
Bernadette Connaughton is Lecturer in Public Administration at the University of Limerick
List of figuresList of tablesList of abbreviationsList of Irish terms1 Environmental policy making and the implementation challenge2 Theories and concepts: Implementation, Europeanisation and multi-level governance3 Developments in EU environmental policy4 EU environmental policy and Ireland 5 Case: Waste management6 Case: Water7 Case: Biodiversity8 Are great expectations in Brussels dashed in Dublin?BibliographyIndex