Jump to content
Horizontal Integration / Bibliography
Horizontal Integration / Bibliography
Contents
Chapter
Expand
|
Collapse
Page
1–14
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–14
Details
15–31
1. Cross-border cooperation as a horizontal integration perspective – an introduction
15–31
Details
32–52
2. Cross-border cooperation within the process of European integration
32–52
Details
2.1 Cross-border cooperation from the perspective of European integration theories
Details
2.1.1 Structuralist approaches
Details
2.1.2 Functionalist and neo-functionalist approaches
Details
2.1.3 Nation-state-centred approaches
Details
2.1.4 Interaction: problem-solving approaches
Details
2.2 Which interlinkeges between EU-integration and cross-border cooperation?
Details
2.3 Cross-border territories: Objects or subjects of European policy?
Details
2.4 Prospects for cross-border cooperation within the process of European integration
Details
53–81
3. Characteristics and perspectives of cross-border governance
53–81
Details
3.1 Results of a cross-sectional analysis of four cross-border cooperation areas
Details
3.1.1 Specific contextual conditions of divergent polycentric structures
Details
3.1.2 Comparable development phases with different finalities
Details
3.1.3 Different actor structures with the same mono-sectoral orientation
Details
3.1.4 Different forms of organisation for comparable goals of action
Details
3.1.5 Strengths and weaknesses of the current cross-border cooperation systems
Details
3.1.6 Discourses and reform concepts
Details
3.2 Perspectives of cross-border governance
Details
82–107
4. On the importance of administrative culture in cross-border cooperation
82–107
Details
4.1 The concept of administrative culture
Details
4.2 Administrative cultural patterns of cross-border cooperation in the Upper Rhine: results of a survey
Details
4.3 On the contingency of administrative culture in cross-border cooperation
Details
4.4 The relativity of cross-border cooperation culture
Details
108–136
5. Capacity development, horizontal subsidiarity and mutual recognition as basic operating principles
108–136
Details
5.1 The practical challenges of cross-border governance – a need for capacity building
Details
5.2 Training and facilitation as basis of capacity building in a cross-border context – The Euro-Institut apprach
Details
Basic training on cross-sectoral competences
Details
Specialised training
Details
Developing competences on European affairs for local and regional authorities
Details
5.3 Horizontal subsidiarity : setting the frame for a systemic capacity building
Details
5.4 Cross-border territories and the principle of mutual recognition – towards a new quality of transnational administrative cooperation?
Details
5.4.1 The principle of mutual recognition within the context of European construction
Details
5.4.2 Fields of application within cross-border cooperation
Details
137–170
6 Territorial institutionalism and the European Administrative Space
137–170
Details
6.1 European territorial cooperation as a model of unsettled administrative cooperation
Details
6.2 The administrative dimension of European Territorial Cooperation (ETC)
Details
Independence of institutional capacity
Details
Integrative task performance
Details
Co-optation
Details
6.3 Conceptual foundation of European territorial institutionalism
Details
6.4 Territorial institutionalism and the European Administrative Space
Details
171–212
7 Potentials of "e"-solutions and Open Government in cross-border cooperation
171–212
Details
7.1 "E"-Solutions as a new stimulus for cross-border administrative relations?
Details
7.2 Improving cross-border cooperation via e-solutions – potentialities of application
Details
7.3 Open Government as future-oriented reform approach in cross-border cooperation?
Details
7.4 OG potentials in cross-border cooperation – Three case studies from the trinational Upper Rhine region
Details
7.4.1 OG dimension transparency: Infobest as a one-stop agency in the cross-border mobility area
Details
7.4.2 OG dimension participation: Cross-border citizen participation in the Upper Rhine region
Details
7.4.3 OG dimension collaboration: The INTERREG Programme
Details
7.5 Conceptual perspectives of Open Government in cross-border cooperation
Details
System-theoretical premises
Details
Neo-Institutionalism: overcoming path dependencies
Details
Participation and collaboration: considering lessons learned from the past
Details
Differentiation of tasks in implementation instead of normative holism
Details
213–231
8 Needs and approaches of legal flexibilisation in the cross-border context
213–231
Details
8.1 Flexibilisation needs in the context of cross-border governance
Details
8.2 Instruments of legal flexibility
Details
8.3 Investigation of practical application perspectives
Details
8.3.1 Extension of the Line D of the Strasbourg Metropolitan Area tramway to Kehl
Details
8.3.2 Extension of the cross-border water supply of the municipality of Bad Bergzabern and the municipality of Wissembourg
Details
8.4 Assessment of the different instruments
Details
The cross-border mechanism
Details
Experimentation and exception clauses
Details
The principle of mutual recognition
Details
232–258
9 Transdisciplinary perspectives of research in administrative science
232–258
Details
9.1 Task structure of cross-border cooperation
Details
9.2 Institutional capacity to act
Details
9.3 Systemic development capacity of cross-border cooperation
Details
9.3 Research perspectives
Details
259–283
Bibliography
259–283
Details
Durchsuchen Sie das Werk
Geben Sie ein Keyword in die Suchleiste ein
CC-BY
Access
Horizontal Integration , page 259 - 283
Bibliography
Autoren
Joachim Beck
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783748914044-259
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-7402-9
ISBN online: 978-3-7489-1404-4
Chapter Preview
Share
Download PDF
Download citation
RIS
BibTeX
Copy DOI link
doi.org/10.5771/9783748914044-259
Share by email
Video schließen
Share by email Nomos eLibrary
Recipient*
Sender*
Message*
Your name
Send message
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Service
apply.