The series maps the range of disciplines addressing the study of European
public administration. In particular, contributions to the series will engage
with the role and nature of the evolving bureaucratic processes of the
European Union, including the study of the EU’s civil service, of organization
aspects of individual institutions such as the European Commission,
the Council of Ministers, the External Action Service, the European
Parliament, the European Court and the European Central Bank and of
inter-institutional relations among these and other actors. The series also
welcomes contributions on the growing role of EU agencies, networks of
technical experts and national officials, and of the administrative dimension
of multilevel governance including international organizations. Of
particular interest in this respect will be the emergence of a European
diplomatic service and the management of the EU’s expanding commercial,
foreign, development, security and defence policies, as well as the role
of institutions in a range of other policy areas of the Union. Beyond this
strong focus of EU administrative governance, the series will also include
texts on the development and practice of administrative governance within
European states. This may include contributions to the administrative history
of Europe, which is not just about rules and regulations governing
bureaucracies, or about formal criteria for measuring the growth of
bureaucracies, but rather about the concrete workings of public administration,
both in its executive functions as in its involvement in policymaking.
Furthermore the series will include studies on the interaction
between the national and European level, with particular attention for the
impact of the EU on domestic administrative systems. The series editors
welcome approaches from prospective contributors and are available to
contact at t.christiansen@maastrichtuniversity.nl and s.vanhoonacker@
maastrichtuniversity.nl for proposals and feedback.