Policy-Making and Diversity in Europe examines the European Union and its policy-making processes
In particular, it asks how an institution that is so riddled with veto points manages to be such an active policy maker. Héritier argues that the diversity of actors'' interests and the need for consensus in European institutions would almost inevitably lead to deadlock, were it not for the existence of creative informal strategies and policy-making patterns. Termed by the author subterfuge, these strategies prevent political impasses and make Europe work.
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