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Regulation is on the rise across the world as the state steps back from public ownership. However, as the authors highlight, the style of political delegation to regulatory authorities has not followed a uniform trajectory but rather institutional endowments, administrative traditions, market structure and business culture have all influenced the creation of regulatory authorities and implementation styles. Noting these variances, the focus of this book is to consider the impact of liberalisation and the introduction of new regulatory structures on three utility sectors - telecommunications, energy and the railways - using Germany and the UK as case studies. With regulation seeking to foster competition at the same time as also having to protect essential services, the authors investigate regulatory styles, costs of new regulatory functions and how firms in the new regulatory landscape access and influence regulatory authorities. The authors consider how EU pressures may hinder or help the functioning of new regulatory markets and the establishment of business-regulator relationships, as well as the broader policy implications for these new regulatory environments. The book also determines how regulatory authorities emerge and evolve under different state traditions and assesses, over time, the degree to which there is potential for convergence, divergence and continued differences as regulatory functions mature.This book will be warmly welcomed by researchers and academics of comparative public policy, politics and regulation. It will also appeal to policy makers and the business community in Europe.
Edited by David Coen, Professor of Public Policy, Department of Political Science, University College London, UK and Adrienne Héritier, Emeritus Professor of Social and Political Sciences, European University Institute, Italy
Contents: 1. Introduction: Redefining and Refining Regulation David CoenPart I: Institutional Change and Environment 2. Developments in Regulatory Regimes: Comparison on Telecommunications, Energy and Rail Dominik Böllhoff3. Administrative Costs of Reforming UtilitiesMichael W. Bauer Part II: Business–Regulator Relationships 4. Changing Business–Regulator Relations in German and UK Telecommunication and Energy Sectors David Coen5. Managing Regulatory Developments in Rail: Compliance and Access Regulation in Germany and the UK Adrienne HéritierPart III: Implementation and Refining Policy 6. The Politics for a Sustainable Energy Industry: Renewable Energy Policy in the United Kingdom and in Germany André Suck7. Public Services: The Role of the European Court of Justice in Correcting the Market Leonor Moral Soriano8. Conclusion: Refining Regulatory RegimesAdrienne Héritier Bibliography Index
‘Refining Regulatory Regimes is certainly one of the best recent theory-driven empirical research works in the field of European regulatory reforms.'