Since its inception, the European Union has stimulated many vigorous debates. This Living Review provides a state of the field perspective on the academic work that has been done to address the question of the perceptions of the European Union as a system of governance. It takes a broad scope in assessing the efforts of scholars and highlights significant theoretical and empirical contributions as well as identifying potential avenues for research. In order to understand perceptions of the EU, scholars have employed national-level frameworks of popular support, particularly partisanship and instrumental self-interest. As the number of members has increased, further research has taken a broader scope to include national identity, institutions, and attitudes regarding the normative and empirical function of both national and EU institutions. Additional works address political intermediaries such as parties, media, and elites. Finally, all of the works are fundamentally concerned with the supportive popular sentiment that underpins the EU’s legitimacy as a political institution. While there are far more works that can be practically included in this review, we have attempted to construct an overview based on the dimensions that define this research as set out by significant contributions at the core of this literature.

Public Perceptions of the EU as a System of Governance / Robert Rohrschneider; Matthew Loveless. - In: LIVING REVIEWS IN EUROPEAN GOVERNANCE. - ISSN 1813-856X. - ELETTRONICO. - 6:2(2011), pp. 5-38. [10.12942/lreg-2011-2]

Public Perceptions of the EU as a System of Governance

Matthew Loveless
2011

Abstract

Since its inception, the European Union has stimulated many vigorous debates. This Living Review provides a state of the field perspective on the academic work that has been done to address the question of the perceptions of the European Union as a system of governance. It takes a broad scope in assessing the efforts of scholars and highlights significant theoretical and empirical contributions as well as identifying potential avenues for research. In order to understand perceptions of the EU, scholars have employed national-level frameworks of popular support, particularly partisanship and instrumental self-interest. As the number of members has increased, further research has taken a broader scope to include national identity, institutions, and attitudes regarding the normative and empirical function of both national and EU institutions. Additional works address political intermediaries such as parties, media, and elites. Finally, all of the works are fundamentally concerned with the supportive popular sentiment that underpins the EU’s legitimacy as a political institution. While there are far more works that can be practically included in this review, we have attempted to construct an overview based on the dimensions that define this research as set out by significant contributions at the core of this literature.
2011
Public Perceptions of the EU as a System of Governance / Robert Rohrschneider; Matthew Loveless. - In: LIVING REVIEWS IN EUROPEAN GOVERNANCE. - ISSN 1813-856X. - ELETTRONICO. - 6:2(2011), pp. 5-38. [10.12942/lreg-2011-2]
Robert Rohrschneider; Matthew Loveless
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/708098
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