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Journal of European Public Policy

Volume 15, Issue 5, 2008

Special Issue:   Reforming the European Commission

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Enlargement, reform and the European Commission. Weathering a perfect storm?
Original Articles

Enlargement, reform and the European Commission. Weathering a perfect storm?

DOI:
10.1080/13501760802133328
John Peterson*

pages 761-780

Abstract

The European Commission may be the world's most powerful international administration. However, the notion that it has been in decline since the resignation of the Santer Commission in 1999 has become accepted wisdom. This analysis asks whether radical internal reforms and the European Union (EU) enlargements of 2004–07 add up to a sort of perfect storm, accelerating the Commission's decay. Recent changes have been dramatic and, in some ways, traumatic. Yet, in some respects, the internal reforms and enlargement are likely to yield a more modern Commission better able to add value to new forms of network governance. Ultimately, there is evidence to suggest that the Commission has become a more intergovernmental institution: less autonomous but more integrated into the EU system. Crucially, however, the very notion of ‘intergovernmental’ requires redefinition in the new EU.

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Details

  • Citation information:
  • Published online: 11 Jul 2008

Author biographies

John Peterson is Professor of International Politics and Head of Politics and International Relations at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

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