Introduction
The recent economic crisis has contributed to what can be understood as ‘institutional soul-searching’ and the raising of questions about the nature of res publica (Emery and Giauque, Reference Emery and Giauque2014: 24). The challenge of understanding social and political order, however, is enduring for the social sciences (Waldo, Reference Waldo1992: 149). Unveiling social order involves disentangling causes of order formation and distortions (March and Olsen, Reference March and Olsen1989; Bartolini, Reference Bartolini2005; Fukuyama, Reference Fukuyama2013; Padgett and Powell, Reference Padgett and Powell2012), consequences of order formation – especially how it challenges already existing orders (Olsen, Reference Olsen2007; Bickerton, Reference Bickerton2012) – and suggesting how social order can be conceptualized. Perhaps unsurprisingly for a political system in the making, the institutional soul searching is particularly intense in the European Union (EU).
Before this background we attempt to advance our understanding of the European administrative order, which, in our view, is the backbone of the emerging political system of the EU. More concretely, we discuss avenues of how best to conceptualize this emerging administrative order. One enduring challenge in so doing, is to establish meaningful categories that capture the essential and enduring characteristics of such an order. Our starting assumption is therefore, that adequate analytical categories to classify contemporary European political-administrative life should offer more empirical variation between than within categories. Acknowledging that both analysts and practitioners face problems of meaningful categorization that capture essential aspects of social order in general (Waldo, Reference Waldo1992: 37; Painter and Peters, Reference Painter and Peters2010: 6; Dahlstrom et al., Reference Dahlstrom, Lapuente and Teorell2012), and the European political-administrative system in particular, this paper suggests a conceptual frame through which administrative order may be understood. Putting, thus, the emphasis on administrative interaction and emerging structures is an attempt to rectify the ongoing debate about the nature of the EU polity in which the administrative dimension is by and large neglected. Be it constructivist perspectives (Checkel, Reference Checkel2005), intergovernmentalism (Moravcsik, Reference Moravcsik1998), or multilevel governance (MLG; Marks, 1993; Hooghe and Marks, Reference Hooghe and Marks2001), administrative factors are usually treated as of secondary importance. This article follows a strand of thought from early neo-functionalism, where integration of bureaucratic elites were considered essential for European integration (Haas, Reference Haas1958: 16), and also recent advances in neo-functionalist work by emphasising how organizations and ways of organizing may bias such processes (Niemann, Reference Niemann2006: 280; Sverdrup and Trondal, Reference Sverdrup and Trondal2008; Niemann and Schmitter, Reference Niemann and Schmitter2009: 55). The ambition of this article is threefold:
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∙ First, it offers a supplementary conceptual frame that takes the ‘administrative dimensions’ seriously. It is suggested that the European politico-administrative system needs to be understood as a European multilevel administrative system (MLA).
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∙ Second, the ambition is to suggest how the MLA approach differs from what might be perceived as its main conceptual rival – the MLG approach.
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∙ Finally, the article offers some empirical illustrations of how the MLA approach adds to our understanding of organizational formation and interaction in the contemporary European administrative system.
Despite attaching focal attention to the administrative dimensions of the EU polity, ‘public administration’ is not analyzed in isolation – as an ‘intellectual wasteland’ (Eluau, Reference Eulau1977: 421) – but rather as a set of capacities that mobilize systematic bias in the production of public policy (Gaus, Reference Gaus1950: 168; Schattschneider, Reference Schattschneider1975; Arellano-Gault et al., Reference Arellano-Gault, Demortain, Rouillard and Thoenig2013: 154). Analyzing enduring patterns and dynamics of the administrative capacities of the EU are essential in our understanding of how public policy is shaped and executed. The MLA approach is thus also a theory of political organization.
Two concerns underpin the relevance of choosing such a focus. First, there is a broader theoretical interest behind analyzing the patterns and dynamics of the EU administrative system. This theoretical agenda relates to the challenge that the emerging EU administrative system poses to the sub-discipline of public administration which has been largely locked in ‘national laboratories’ (Christensen and Lægreid, Reference Christensen and Lægreid2011; Verhoest et al., Reference Verhoest, Thiel, Bouckaert and Lægreid2012). Theoretical lessons from social sciences are often affected by the empirical laboratories available to scholars. The domain of public administration is no exception. Theoretical advances may thus be gained by challenging methodological nationalism. As new forms of political and administrative orders emerge, they need to be appropriately analyzed and interpreted in view of the changes they carry for bureaucratic systems and public policy.
Second, the MLA approach directs attention toward an emergent administrative order in Europe through the development of novel institutional configurations. The more the EU is involved in policy coordination and implementation, the more important become issues of administrative interaction between the involved political levels – if only because the EU lacks an administrative basis to conduct ‘supranational’ policies independently from member states’ administrative systems (Bauer, Reference Bauer2006a and Reference Bauer2006b; Heidbreder, Reference Heidbreder2011; Bauer and Becker, Reference Bauer and Becker2014). This line of research emphasizes patterns of integration of public administration – not its outcome. One early contribution to this line of research was an ‘Italian law school’ studying administrative engrenage (Berlin et al., Reference Berlin, Pag and Bourtembourg1987; Cassese, Reference Cassese1987; Chiti, Reference Chiti2004; Franchini, Reference Franchini2004). Contemporary public administration research has similarly been preoccupied with both understanding the European administrative capacity building (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Rittberger and Wonka, Reference Rittberger and Wonka2011), and the interconnected nature of the European public administration (Curtin and Egeberg, Reference Curtin and Egeberg2008; Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2009; Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2010). Illustrative of the latter approach, the European administrative system has been conceived of as a multilevel and nested network administration, though sometimes loosely coupled (Benz, Reference Benz2012, 2015), where institutions at different levels of government ‘are linked together in the performance of tasks…’ (see also Eising and Kohler-Koch, 1999; Hofmann and Turk, Reference Hofmann and Turk2006: 583).
Despite successful advances in conceptualizing the EU administrative system, we argue that two challenges plague contemporary public administration scholarship. First, public administration as ‘a’ sub-discipline (Raadschelders, Reference Raadschelders2011) has paid scant attention to ongoing transformations of bureaucratic interaction in the EU, and how this relates to other developments in public sector organizations (Verhoest et al., Reference Verhoest, Thiel, Bouckaert and Lægreid2012). This literature has failed to acknowledge how shifting features of the state – such as agencification and subsequent networking of agencies – coexist with the rise of novel forms of multilevel administrative ‘patterns’ (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Martens, Reference Martens2010; Danielsen and Yesilkagit, Reference Danielsen and Yesilkagit2014; Trondal, Reference Trondal2014). Much public administration literature has neglected that ways of organizing the making of public policy at one level may bias and ‘lock in’ ways of making public policy across levels. The administrative realities of the EU – perhaps with the exception of work concerning the European Commission – remains under-studied outside EU studies – even though it has received increased academic attention in recent years (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Trondal, Reference Trondal2010; Ellinas and Suleiman, Reference Ellinas and Suleiman2012; Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013; Wille, Reference Wille2013). Public administration scholars have, at best, imperfect and partial understandings of how the European administration function, how bureaucratic interactions occur horizontally and vertically among various political layers, how administrative structures across levels are developing, how precisely supranational administrative actors cultivate and use resources, and how national bureaucratic structures and actors adapt to and exploit respective constellations. From an administrative science perspective, it is of great importance to come to grips with the contemporary bureaucratic reality in the EU.
The article is continuous in the following steps: The next step outlines the MLA approach and the three analytical dimensions underneath. This section also subsequently shows how the MLA and the MLG approach are analytically distinct. According to an MLA approach, the European administrative system, and its component parts, is captured in this study along three analytical dimensions: (i) institutional independence, (ii) integration, and (iii) co-optation. These dimensions will subsequently serve, on the one hand, to capture central aspects of the integration of public administration in Europe, and on the other hand, to accentuate what makes the MLA approach different from its major rival – the MLG approach. The final section applies the MLA approach empirically and demonstrates why we should bother about the MLA approach.
A multilevel administration (MLA) approach
This section contributes in two important ways to our argument: First it outlines the contours of a MLA approach; second it discusses how this approach differs from the MLG approach.
During the past 2 decades, the multilevel character of the EU system has been intensively discussed (Marks, Reference Marks1993; Piattoni, Reference Piattoni2010). Referring to the EU as a multilevel system has become so colloquial that the term often gets used rather metaphorically, thereby hollowing out its analytical value. This has perhaps contributed to the fact that the mechanisms which fuel the transforming potential of the multilevel constellation of EU policy making remain vague and poorly understood – in particular in view of their impact on the administrative dimension.
This article proposes that a ‘level’ refers to the following items: Separate and relatively independent sets of institutions, rules, procedures and personnel. Multilevel administration thus entails that a new platform emerges that interlinks these items at national level with parallel items at the level above. This platform of items consists of the paradoxical mix of institutional independence and institutional interconnectedness across levels of government. It consists of separate institutions (such as the Commission) that are able to act relatively independently from member-state governments, and at the same time, have an institutional interconnectedness between the very same institutions (March, Reference March1999). Already acknowledged by the MLG literature, understanding the dynamics of this paradoxical mix – of system independence and interdependence – is essential in order to gain an adequate understanding of the multilevel character of the EU administrative system (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Blank1996a; Hooghe and Marks, Reference Hooghe and Marks2001).
A core part of the literature on the European administrative system has centered on the emergence of a multilevel administrative system, sometimes characterized as a European administrative space (Trondal and Peters, Reference Trondal and Peters2013). This scholarship has been subdivided into a two-dimensional debate. First, a political science debate that tries to theoretically conceptualize MLG more broadly (Marks, Reference Marks1993; Hooghe and Marks, Reference Hooghe and Marks2001; Benz, Reference Benz2012), and a more recent public administration debate that aims to understand the EU as a MLA (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Trondal, Reference Trondal2007; Bauer and Trondal, Reference Bauer and Trondal2015; Benz, Reference Benz2015).
Dimensions of MLA: institutional independence, integration, co-optation
We can identify basically two waves of the study of ‘MLA’ (hereby termed ‘MLA I’ and ‘MLA II’). This study draws attention to the second surge of research (‘MLA II’).
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∙ ‘MLA I’: The first wave of research emphasized convergence of administrative systems and policies. This research measured MLA by its outcome – which were more convergent administrative forms, practices and ways of doing things. This research developed from the fields of comparative government and comparative public administration, studying, for example, origins and spread of common administrative traditions (Knill, Reference Knill2001; Meyer-Sahling and Yesilkagit, Reference Meyer-Sahling and Yesilkagit2011) and public management practices (Christensen and Lægreid, Reference Christensen and Lægreid2011). ‘MLA’ was conceived of as featuring the convergence of administrative systems around some shared forms, organizational standards, and values. One early contribution to this strand of research defined ‘MLA’ as European administrative convergence, or the ‘convergence on a common European model’ (Olsen, Reference Olsen2003: 506). One example is the seminal study of national co-ordination of EU policy by Kassim et al. (Reference Kassim, Peters and Wright2000). They basically examined degrees of convergence of co-ordination arrangements in EU member-states. Amoretti and Musilla (Reference Amoretti and Musella2011) have more recently showed how e-government tools create shared and integrated digital administrative architectures in Europe. Several examples along the ‘new governance’ research track could be added.
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∙ ‘MLA II’: A second and more recent line of research, conceives of ‘MLA’ as featuring an emergent common administrative order in Europe through the development of new institutional constellations and configurations (Benz, Reference Benz2015; Heidbreder, Reference Heidbreder2015). This second line of research emphasizes new patterns or processes of integration of public administration – not its outcome. Research has been preoccupied with both understanding European administrative capacity-building (Bauer, Reference Bauer2006a and Reference Bauer2006b; Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Rittberger and Wonka, Reference Rittberger and Wonka2011), and understanding the interconnected nature of the European public administration (Curtin and Egeberg, Reference Curtin and Egeberg2008; Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2009; Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2010). Illustrative of the latter approach, Hofmann and Turk (Reference Hofmann and Turk2006) conceive of ‘MLA’ as the emergence of a multilevel and nested network-administration where institutions at different levels of government ‘are linked together in the performance of tasks…’ (Hofmann and Turk, Reference Hofmann and Turk2006: 583).
How, then, can one recognize ‘MLA II’ if it occurs? Following the second wave of ‘MLA’ research (‘MLA II’), three proxies are suggested for analysis: institutional independence, integration and co-optation.
Independence
First, ‘MLA II’ involves institutionalizing some level of independent administrative capacity at a European level, notably the rise of relatively permanent and separate institutions that are able to act relatively independently from member-state governments. In his analysis of institutionalization in the context of political development, Huntington (Reference Huntington1968) argued that autonomy was a first requirement of successful state development. An independent European administrative system must possess some capacity of its own (Zurn Reference Zurn2012: 731). Envisaged already by Saint-Simon in 1814 (Reference Saint-Simon1964: 35–38), one necessary factor in building common administrative systems – even common political order – is the establishment of common institutions, including a permanent congress independent of national governments serving the common interest. This article suggests how the growth of administrative capacities not only within the Commission, but also in institutions surrounding the Commission, may contribute to strengthening the independent capacities of the Commission – and thus facilitate the formation of ‘MLA’. In addition to in-house organisational capacities, the Commission is supplied with the auxiliary capacities composed of expert committees and EU agencies. Independent administrative capacities will subsequently enable the independent development and implementation of public policy at, or from, a ‘European’ level.
Integration
Empirically it is often observed that the rise of common administrative space does not result in the institutionalization of coherent administrative capacities. Instead, different components of administrative centers do usually overlap, counteract, layer and sometimes be out of sync rather than being integrated, coordinated and ‘ordered’ (Orren and Skowronek, Reference Orren and Skowronek2004). Supplementing the vertical specialization of administrative systems, the internal integration of administrative systems is also increasingly documented within national governments – notably reasserting centers of executive government (Peters, Reference Peters2004; Poguntke and Webb, Reference Poguntke and Webb2005). Similarly, one strand of contemporary research suggests that the Commission has become increasingly integrated – both within the Commission administration and between the Commission administration and the College of Commissioners (Wille, 2013). The history of the Commission documents periods of internal integration. Best known, perhaps, is the legacy of the Delors Commission (1985–94), characterized by presidential steering and a relative disregard of administrative routines (Kassim, Reference Kassim2006; Christiansen, Reference Christiansen2008: 63). MLA thus centers attention on the extent to which we see inter- and intra-organizational coordination of EU-level administrative capacities – notably within the Commission – and the extent to which we observe parallel fragmentation, ‘silo-ization’, and sub-culturalization of the administrative services. The question remains also if these competing patterns of administrative integration and disintegration may co-exist within the European administration, albeit embedded and layered within different administrative sub-units. As shown in previous studies, administrative silo-ization is found at the heart of policy DGs in the Commission (Trondal, Reference Trondal2012) whilst at the same time we see organisational capacities emerging around the Commission President, partly by reforming the Secretariat-General (SG) into an administrative service center at the disposal of the President (Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013).
Co-optation
The independence and integration of administrative capacities at the European level may not only have implications for how the Commission formulates and enacts public policy. The rise of independent and integrated European administrative capacities may also increase its ability to co-opt administrative sub-centers by stealth – notably EU agencies and domestic agencies, but probably also agencies within other international organizations thus reaching into global administrative architectures. The horizontal sector specialization of the Commission services may affect how the Commission co-opts administrative sub-units. This may be reflected in the development of direct links between Commissioners and ‘their’ EU agencies, as well as the development of relatively tight ties between Commission DGs and domestic agencies that work within similar policy fields. According to an MLA II approach, both horizontal networks of regulators (Yesilgakit, Reference Yesilkagit2011) and domestic agencies (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2009) may be co-opted by the Commission and offer supplies of relevant administrative capacities.
MLG and multilevel administration
The MLA II approach (hereafter termed MLA) highlights analytical dimensions largely left untouched by the MLG approach. The above analytical dimensions serve not only to capture central aspects of the integration of public administration in Europe, but also to accentuate what makes the MLA approach different from its major rival – the MLG approach: This section suggests that the MLG and MLA approaches mainly vary with respect to units of analysis, conceptions of the coherence of units, and sources of contingency of governance. Our point here is not to recap the MLG approach (Bache and Flinders, Reference Bache and Flinders2004; Hooghe and Marks, 2004; Piattoni, Reference Piattoni2010), but to suggest how a MLA approach may offer attention to the administrative dimension of the European administrative system, which thus complements and helps in systematizing a more encompassing theory of MLG.
First, the unit of analysis differs in MLG and MLA approaches. The MLG approach has both historically and contemporarily applied regions as their favorite unit of analysis (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Nielsen and Ray1996b, Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008: 113; Piattoni, Reference Piattoni2010). Focus has been on the relative autonomy of regions and how this autonomy supplies regions with a capacity to bypass state governments in their interaction with the Brussels apparatus. One conclusion is that the separation of domestic and international politics – and thus domestic and foreign affairs administrations – is ambiguous due to the interconnectedness of political authority across levels of governance (Hooghe and Marks, Reference Hooghe and Marks2001: 4). In contrast, the MLA approach suggests that research focus should shift from regions towards the administrative interior of government institutions at different levels of government, principally towards administrative subunits at each level, and how these mutually relate. To illustrate, the MLA approach directs attention toward the behavior and role perceptions of unelected office holders (Trondal et al., Reference Trondal, Marcussen, Larsson and Veggeland2010): the autonomy and interaction of subunits at each administrative level (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Ege and Bauer, Reference Ege and Bauer2013; Trondal and Peters, Reference Trondal and Peters2013), the ‘in-house’ socialization processes of staff (Beyers, Reference Beyers2010), etc. Focus is thus not primarily on government apparatuses as arenas, but rather on government apparatuses as normative structures that mobilize bias (Schattschneider, Reference Schattschneider1975) and that contribute to a systematic patterning of behavioral patterns among office holders (Simon, Reference Simon1957). Consequently, the way administrative subunits are formally organized at all levels of government is assumed to bias the roles, beliefs, identities, and behavior evoked by the staff involved, and ultimately the multilevel administrative governance processes being processed. Such organizational characteristics might include organizational capacity, organisational specialization (horizontal/vertical), organizational affiliation (primary/secondary), organizational coupling (tight/loose), etc.
Second, assumptions on the coherence of units of analysis vary between MLG and MLA approaches. Although the MLG approach successfully challenged the coherent nature of states (Piattoni, Reference Piattoni2010: 2), at the same time, it largely treated its unit of analysis – regions – as coherent units of analysis. The definition of regions did not ‘encompass possible sources of regional authority …’ (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008: 113). Importantly, the dimensions applied to measure regional authority in the MLG approach did not contribute to unpack the organizational architecture of regions (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008: 115 – Table 1). For example, the nine dimensions applied by Marks et al. (Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008) to measure local authority aimed to gauge relationships between regions (as coherent black boxes) and national governments. None of these dimensions, however, suggested how the administrative interior of regions makes a difference in this regard. This lack of interest in the administrative inland of regions is a direct consequence of the fact that the MLG approach is basically interested in ‘the allocation of authority across general purpose jurisdictions’ and not the internal administrative architecture of regions as items for analysis (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008: 111).
MLG=multilevel governance approach; MLA= multilevel administrative system.
Source: own compilation.
This lack of attention to the organizational dimensions of multilevel systems in the MLG approach is paralleled in international organization (IO) studies. Recent research on governance in IOs pays only scant attention to the bureaucracies of these organizations (Karns and Mingst, Reference Karns and Mingst2004; Hawkins et al., Reference Hawkins2006; but see Biermann and Siebenhühner, Reference Biermann and Siebenhüner2009; Bauer and Ege, Reference Bauer and Ege2014). One explanation for this lack of scholarly attention to the administrative dimension is partly the gulf that exists between IO literature and public administration literature. One clear example of this gulf is the book by Acharya and Johnston (Reference Acharya and Johnston2007) that makes a comparative analysis of IOs without mentioning their administrative systems. Rationalist accounts of IOs – the realist, neo-realist, and liberalist variants – treat international administrations as epiphenomena of the interaction of states. Studies of IOs have been preoccupied with studying the more visible interplay of states rather than the back-stage activities of the secretariats (Rochester, Reference Rochester1986). One notable exception is the growing volume of studies of the Commission and, to some extent, reports on the UN Secretariat (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006; Chesterman, Reference Chesterman2007). Researching the everyday decision making of international bureaucracies has been of less interest than studying the voting behavior of states in general assemblies (Hix, Reference Hix2002), analyzing the great leaders of international bureaucracies, such as the UN General Secretary (Cox, Reference Cox1969: 202; Rochester, Reference Rochester1986; Chesterman, Reference Chesterman2007), and studying reforms of IOs (Bauer and Knill, Reference Bauer and Knill2007). Similarly, regime analysis tends to look at international administrations as intervening variables that ‘somehow affect regime outcomes’, thus not treating international administrations as institutions in their own right (Bauer, Reference Bauer2006b: 26; Underdal, 2008; Reinalda, Reference Reinalda2013). Illustrative of this is the seminal work of Cox and Jacobson (Reference Cox and Jacobson1973: 428) which reflects this lack of administrative focus, concluding that ‘international organizations facilitate the orderly management of intergovernmental relations without significantly changing the structure of power that governs these relations …’. Discovering that international administrations can have identities, resources, authority, and interests of their own was, of course, an important development (Barnett and Finnemore, Reference Barnett and Finnemore2004). However, seen from a public administration point of view, these observations are less surprising (Ege and Bauer, Reference Ege and Bauer2013). The MLA approach treats their units of analysis as internally specialized. It is assumed that different degrees and types of organizational specialization – both at national and EU level – may have systematic implications on multilevel administrative governance processes.
Finally, MLG and MLA approaches diverge on core assumptions on the contingency of governance processes. The MLG approach has been successful in measuring regional authority, and thus in accounting for local conditions of multilevel processes (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Schekel2008). It is assumed that multilevel processes are primarily fostered by different degrees and types of regional autonomy, although contemporary MLG research is also increasingly interested in assessing IO authority (Hooghe and Marks, Reference Hooghe and Marks2013). The MLG approach is theoretically actor-centered (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Hooghe and Blank1996a: 348). To the extent that institutional variables enter the equation, they are treated as aggregative items (Marks et al., Reference Marks, Nielsen and Ray1996b: 170) and thus compatible with a thin ‘exchange based’ conception of institutions. In such an account, ‘politics can be seen as aggregating individual preferences into collective action by procedures of rational bargaining, negotiation, coalition formation, and exchange’ (March and Olsen, Reference March and Olsen1995: 7). Institutional variables are merely treated as intervening variables that constrain purposeful action. Nowhere does the MLG approach ‘unpack’ institutions as independent variables. By contrast, the MLA approach assumes institutions as independent variables. One crucial causal mechanism in the MLA approach is the supply of administrative capacities at each level of government. It is suggested that the supply of organizational capacities at sub-unit level may have certain implications for how organizations and humans act. The MLA approach is thus also a theory of political organization. It is assumed that organizational capacity building provides government institutions with leverage to act independently and to integrate external institutions into their orbits. The MLA approach departs from the assumption that norms, rules, and routines embedded in institutions mobilize biases in public policy because these factors offer cognitive and normative shortcuts and categories that simplify and guide decision makers’ search for satisficing and appropriate solutions (Simon, Reference Simon1957; Cyert and March, Reference Cyert and March1963; Schattschneider, Reference Schattschneider1975; March and Olsen, Reference March and Olsen1989). Consequently, the decision-making behavior of ‘Eurocrats’ is likely to reflect their primary organizational embedment into government institutions and their sub-units.
Two empirical predictions follow from this assumption: First, the supply of independent administrative capacities is necessary for government institutions to act and to affect how other institutions act. Thus, the supply of administrative capacities in the Commission is expected to increase the likelihood that signals from the Commission will be ascribed importance by officials in other EU institutions and in domestic agencies. In effect, patterns of multilevel administrative governance between subunits are assumed to be supplied by the variety of administrative capacities of the Commission. Second, the behavior, role, and identity perceptions evoked by government officials are expected to be primarily directed towards those administrative subunits that are the primary supplier of relevant decision premises. It is assumed that multilevel administrative governance is facilitated by the organizational capacities of government subunits at both levels of government. One empirical implication is administrative integration along sectoral lines, for example between Commission DGs and agency subunits.
In sum, this section has suggested that the MLA approach is an important element in a broader theory of MLG than suggested by the MLG approach. The MLA approach may offer attention to the administrative dimension of the European administrative system and its added value is the conceptualization of administrative structures, values and interaction across levels of government – and is, therefore, a theory of political organization of the European administrative system.
Why bother about the European administrative system? Empirical illustrations
A complete empirical application of the MLA approach is beyond the remit of this article (Bauer and Trondal, Reference Bauer and Trondal2015). The suggestive illustrations center on the core node of the European administration, namely its executive arm – the Commission. However, some footnotes are also offered to administrative sub-units outside the Commission, but which serve as part of the multilevel European administration. This section examines the European administrative system with regard to institutional independence, integration, and co-optation.
Academic interest in the administrative dimension of the European integration process grew in the aftermath of the European Single Act and the completion of the Common Market. It is perhaps no coincidence that the area from which this scholarly interest initially emerged was due to the questions concerning the coherent and uniform national implementation of policies agreed upon at EU level (Siedentopf and Ziller, Reference Siedentopf and Ziller1988). It was the problem of ‘making European policies work’ coherently and timely, where the differential reality of national public administration systems came to the forefront (Knill, Reference Knill2001).
Formulating and implementing public policy in Europe has historically been a prerogative of national administrations. The capacity of the state has largely been determined by ‘the [administrative] capacity of the state to effectively achieve the chosen policy outcomes’ (Matthews, Reference Matthews2012: 281). Recent studies, however, suggest that these prerogatives have become complemented with the rise in administrative capacities within and among EU institutions and their interaction with (sub)national actors (Genschel and Jachtenfuchs, Reference Genschel and Jachtenfuchs2014). A European administrative system serves to create an institutional infrastructure for the joint formulation and execution of public policy. The rise of a genuine European public administration is shown to reflect administrative capacity building, primarily in the Commission and EU agencies but increasingly also in domestic agencies and networks of regulatory agencies (Egeberg, Trondal and Vestlund, 2015a; Trondal, Reference Trondal2015). Capacity building at the EU center may subsequently strengthen the Commission’s capacity to pursue independent policy formulation, to manage decentralized policy implementation, and to draw common lessons from experience. In this regard, the rise of a European administrative system at EU level may also strengthen the Commission’s capacity to co-opt domestic non-majoritarian institutions and networks of these, thus integrating public administration in Europe across levels of government. Despite public administration being conceived of as a core state power (Genschel and Jachtenfuchs, Reference Genschel and Jachtenfuchs2014), capacity building in public administration serves to achieve regulatory integration in mostly non-core state policies.
Institutional independence
First, the rise of a European administrative system involves institutionalizing some degree of independent administrative capacity at European level, especially relatively permanent and separate institutions that are able to act fairly independently from member-state governments. The growth of administrative capacities, not only within the Commission but also in institutions surrounding the Commission, may contribute to strengthening the independent capacities of the Commission – thus facilitating the formation of a common European administrative system. In addition to in-house organizational capacities, the Commission has increasingly been supplied with auxiliary capacities composed of expert committees, EU agencies, networks of national regulators, and even the European Parliament (EP) administration.
Jean Monnet intended to create a small, independent, and entrepreneurial European executive institution above member-state governments for the ever-closer integration of states. However, following a steady growth of staff over the subsequent 60 years, the most recent expansion of the EU administration is found at the level below the Commission, notably among EU agencies (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2011; Rittberger and Wonka, Reference Rittberger and Wonka2011; Busuioc et al., Reference Busouic, Groenleer and Trondal2012). In the Commission literature a long-standing myth has challenged the idea of an independent Commission arguing that nationality fundamentally shapes the preferences of Commission staff and ultimately the internal functioning of the Commission (Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013). However, more recent work reports that the Commission administration is able to act fairly independently of member-state governments. Studies suggest that the rise of organizational capacity inside the Commission, particularly in sectorally organized DGs, in practice, tends to safeguard its independence vis-à-vis member-state governments. Ellinas and Suleiman (Reference Ellinas and Suleiman2012: 65) show that top Commission bureaucrats tend to rely customarily on information from within the Commission administration. Moreover, Commission officials, also the seconded national experts, indicate a rather low degree of identification with their home governments and tend to have infrequent contact with their home administration (Murdoch and Trondal, Reference Murdoch and Trondal2013). Similar observations are made on position formation among permanent officials (Hartlapp et al., Reference Hartlapp, Metz and Rauh2010) and on role perceptions among the College of Commissioners (Egeberg, Reference Egeberg2006).
Faced with an increasing agenda overload, one supplementary strategy available to the Commission, in addition to building in-house administrative capacities, has been to import external experts when preparing legislative initiatives (Christiansen and Kirchner, Reference Christiansen and Kirchner2000; Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Schaefer and Trondal2003; Larsson, Reference Larson2003; Gornitzka and Sverdrup, Reference Gornitzka and Sverdrup2015). Studies suggest that expert committees tend, in practice, to strengthen the administrative capacity of the sectoral structure of the Commission administration for two main reasons. First, these committees are typically subordinated directly under respective DGs; most expert committees report to their parent DG and seldom to other DGs. Second, most expert committees are single-task entities largely mirroring the sector specialization of the DGs (see Gornitzka and Sverdrup, Reference Gornitzka and Sverdrup2015). National government officials attending these committees also evoke a role perception that reflects their sector portfolios to a larger extent than their country of origin (Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Schaefer and Trondal2003).
In addition, the Commission has EU agencies and networks of independent national agencies at its disposal (see Busuioc et al., Reference Busouic, Groenleer and Trondal2012). First, EU agencies may supply the Commission with relevant administrative and executive capacity. The ‘agency fever’ at EU level has been accelerating fairly recently (Curtin and Dehousse, Reference Curtin and Dehousse2012) – since the early 1990s more than 30 regulatory EU agencies have been created. Several of the agencies currently existing are granted some degree of formal decision-making power, while the remaining agencies have tasks such as information gathering, technical support, and administration (Groenleer, Reference Groenleer2009). Most EU agencies have restricted de jure powers, particularly with regard to making decisions. Still, studies document profound task expansion also among ‘non-regulatory’ EU agencies (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2011). EU agencies, in practice, thus tend to supply the Commission with executive capacities at the implementation stage of the policy-making cycle. In addition to EU agencies, networks of national regulatory agencies have mushroomed, particularly with the role of facilitating the implementation of EU regulations (Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Martens and Trondal2015c). These networks have developed largely on the basis of pre-existing structures (e.g. comitology committees), and have contributed to the accumulation and layering of independent administrative capacities that supports the independent implementation of EU regulations.
Finally, even the EP administration is shown to supply the Commission with relevant administrative capacities (Dobbels and Neuhold, Reference Dobbels and Neuhold2015; Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Gornitzka, Trondal and Johannessen2015b). Since the EP was established, it has witnessed a profound growth in its General Secretariat. The EP Secretariat, however, has been observed to gravitate towards Commission DGs. For example, Egeberg et al. (Reference Egeberg, Gornitzka, Trondal and Johannessen2015b) show that EP officials enjoy a multiplicity of contacts as part of their daily work. However, the most important contact point reported is the Commission. EP officials also tend to emphasize, most strongly, arguments from the Commission, next to those from the Council. In short, the Commission seems to be the key interlocutor for the EP administration, although a systematic comparison with the Council Secretariat has not been reported (Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Martens and Trondal2015c).
In summary, therefore, the Commission now has profound independent administrative capacities at its disposal, in addition to its increased in-house capacity.
Institutional integration
Supplementing the vertical specialization of administrative systems, the internal integration of administrative systems is also increasingly debated and documented within national governments – notably reasserting centers of executive government (Peters, Reference Peters2004; Poguntke and Webb, Reference Poguntke and Webb2005). The literature has documented a pendulum shift from New Public Management reform measures toward ‘joined-up government’ in public sector organizations. The latter is seen as a wide-ranging concept geared toward reducing fragmentation of the public sector and public service delivery (Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Fimreite and Lægreid2014: 443). In organisational terms, this shift has accompanied ambitions to build action capacities within government(s) generally and ambitions toward stronger political coordination of sub-ordinate agencies particularly. Increased national administrative coordination, in this sense, has been interpreted as a reaction to problems of governing a ‘decentred public sector’ (Peters, Reference Peters2004: 131). Reasserting the center has had at least two ingredients: First, an ambition to centralize executive powers within national governments, and secondly to concentrate power resources around national executive heads (Dahlström et al., Reference Dahlström, Peters and Pierre2011).
In the European Union, studies have shown a relative intensifying of vertical administrative interactions – in particular after the Maastricht treaty went into force (Wessels, Reference Wessels1998, Reference Wessels2000). Again, this trend of increasing administrative interaction following ever greater political cooperation is best studied on the example of the European Commission. Studies suggest that the Commission has faced an enduring tension between administrative integration and disintegration – over time and in different parts of the services. One strand of contemporary research suggests that the Commission has become increasingly integrated – both within the Commission administration and between the Commission administration and the College of Commissioners – supported by an enhanced coordination role of the Secretariat General (Wille, 2013; Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013). The history of the Commission documents periods of internal integration – the best known of which, perhaps, are the legacies of the Jean Monnet presidency and the Delors presidency. Essentially, however, the power-base of those presidents was largely based on their personal capacities and achievements. The power-base was, though, less safeguarded through administrative capacity building (Duchène, Reference Duchène1994; Drake, Reference Drake2000). The contemporary internal integration of the Commission is centered on building organizational capacities around the President, partly by reforming the SG into an administrative service center at the disposal of the President (Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013). Kassim et al. (2013) and Hartlapp et al. (Reference Hartlapp, Metz and Rauh2010, Reference Hartlapp, Metz and Rauh2014), suggest that this bureaucratic integration is mainly forged by the Commission SG. Integration within the Commission administration is also observed with regard to intra-service decision-making processes, the rise of a common ‘culture’ across DGs, and structured relationships between the Commission administration and outside actors – such as international organizations, EU agencies, and domestic agencies (see Kassim et al., Reference Kassim, Peterson, Bauer, Connolly, Dehousse, Hooghe and Thompson2013; Murdoch and Trondal, Reference Murdoch and Trondal2013; Hartlapp, Reference Hartlapp2015).
A second strand of research, however, highlights that the internal administrative integration of the Commission merely co-exists with administrative disintegration, ‘silo-ization’, and subculturalization of the Commission administration (Ellinas and Suleiman, Reference Ellinas and Suleiman2012; Trondal, Reference Trondal2012). A recent study suggests that the integrative ambitions of the Commission President and the SG sometimes exceed their integrative capacities (Trondal, Reference Trondal2012). The horizontal interlocking role of the SG tends to collide with the organizational resources embedded in policy DGs, fuelling inter-DG conflicts of turfs and policies (Hartlapp et al., Reference Hartlapp, Metz and Rauh2012: 27). The administrative integration of the Commission seems in practice to sometimes be thwarted by the horizontal specialization of the DGs and the influence of the most powerful DGs (Hartlapp et al., Reference Hartlapp, Metz and Rauh2014).
In sum, despite observing a profound institutional independence in the European administration – notably within the Commission administration (see above), the same administrative apparatus faces a lasting tension between administrative integration and disintegration.
Institutional co-optation
Finally, the independence and integration of the Commission not only has implications for how Commission officials think and act. The rise of independent and integrated European administrative capacities also increases its ability to co-opt administrative sub-centers by stealth – particularly EU agencies and domestic agencies, but also agencies within other international organizations, thus reaching into global administrative architectures (see Gulbrandsen, Reference Gulbrandsen2012). Studies suggest that the inherent sectoral logic within Commission services has certain effects on its ability to co-opt administrative subunits. This is reflected in the development of direct links between Commissioners, DGs and ‘their’ partner EU agency (Groenleer, Reference Groenleer2009: 130; Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Trondal and Vestlund2014). A recent study confirms that the pivotal role of the Commission in the daily life of EU agencies is evident within policy areas in which the Commission has considerable organizational capacities at its disposal (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2011). Moreover, at the policy formulation stage, the ‘parent’ Commission DG is seen by EU agency officials as particularly influential. At the policy implementation stage, in contrast, influence shifts towards one’s own agency and national agencies, although at this stage the Commission is considered the most powerful institution outside one’s own agency (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2011). The Commission thus seems more vital in the daily life of EU agencies and thus, a de facto supplier of administrative capacities for the Commission. This is particularly so within policy areas in which the Commission has considerable organizational capacities at its disposal (see Hobolth and Martinsen, 2013).
Second, the sectoral organization of the Commission administration is also reflected in its relationships to domestic agencies and their administrative networks. Both horizontal networks of regulators (Yesilgakit, Reference Yesilkagit2011) and domestic agencies (Egeberg and Trondal, Reference Egeberg and Trondal2009) seem to supply the Commission with relevant administrative capacities, particularly in the application of EU regulations. Domestic agencies organized at arm’s length from ministerial departments enjoy a certain level of independence regarding their exercise of discretion. Recent studies suggest that even the daily practice of EU legislation at the national level no longer remains solely in the hands of national governments (Egeberg et al., Reference Egeberg, Martens and Trondal2015c).
In sum, studies document processes whereby the Commission DGs, in practice, co-opt administrative sub-units – notably EU agencies and domestic agencies. These processes are primarily observed at the implementation stage of the decision-making cycle, and in policy areas where the Commission DGs have substantial organizational capacities.
Conclusion
This article has suggested a conceptual frame through which administrative order may be understood. Arguably, the catalogue of categories of the EU polity fails to acknowledge the administrative dimension. The ambition of this study has been to offer a supplementary conceptual frame that takes the ‘administrative dimensions’ seriously, thereby also suggesting that previous accounts of the EU polity have left this dimension at the side. It is suggested that the European politico-administrative system should be conceived primarily as a European multilevel administrative system (MLA). Second, this article has suggested how the MLA approach differs from one of its conceptual rivals – the MLG approach. Finally, the study has offered some empirical illustrations of the MLA approach in the contemporary European administrative system.
In sum, the article suggests that the MLA approach is an important element in a broader theory of MLG than suggested by the MLG approach. The MLA approach may offer attention to the administrative dimension of the European administrative system and its added value is the conceptualization of administrative structures, values and interaction across levels of government – and is therefore a theory of political organization of the European administrative system.
The theoretical interest in the administrative dimension of the EU polity is related to the challenge that the emerging EU administrative system poses for the discipline of public administration which has been largely locked in national laboratories. Theoretical lessons from social sciences are arguably affected by the empirical laboratories available to scholars. The domain of public administration may arguably gain theoretical advances by challenging methodological nationalism. Moreover, despite successful advances in conceptualizing the EU administrative system, this article has argued that public administration, as a sub-discipline, has paid scant attention to ongoing transformations of bureaucratic interaction in the EU, and how this relates to other developments in public sector organizations. This literature has failed to account for how changing features of the state – such as agencification – impact and fuel the rise of novel forms of multilevel administrative governance. According to the MLA approach outlined here, the European administrative system, and its component parts, is taken seriously. This is captured along three analytical dimensions: institutional independence, integration, and co-optation. These dimensions serve first to capture central aspects of the integration of public administration in Europe, and second to accentuate what makes the MLA approach different from one of its rivals – the MLG approach.
Future studies applying the MLA approach would be potentially manifold. The MLA is of relevance for studying how federal-type systems – such as the EU – integrate, and particularly the organizational dimension of such processes. This approach is also of relevance for studying the settlement of emergent organizations and organized systems. Organizations and organized systems are temporary settlements of rules and procedures, demography, locations, beliefs and norms. The MLA approach is particularly helpful in conceptualizing the settlement of emergent systems that involves multiple tiers of authoritative decision centers. Finally, we would also emphasize the attractiveness of studying the sustainability of the European administrative system. One way to do this would be to study how it operates under stress and turbulence. The sustainability and resilience of institutional independence, integration and cooptation may be taken for granted during periods of stability. During periods of turbulence, these items might be subject to test. Turbulent times – such as those typically associated with financial stress – are marked by the lack of ‘order, rationality, control and predictability’ (Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, March and Olsen2012: 7). Turbulence is coined by long-term unruliness and tensions within environments and organizations – that might go unnoticed by practitioners and observers. As seen by the recent Euro-zone crisis in Europe, the Euro was marked by some kind of unsettledness already from the launch of the new Euro area, but the sudden crisis that hit Greece – and subsequent EU member states – unveiled the latent turbulent nature of the arrangement. During turbulence decision-makers face choices that need to be made under unfamiliar degrees of uncertainty (Tamuz and Lewis, Reference Tamuz and Lewis2008: 158). Turbulent times can reveal the fragility of institutions and produce surprising cascading dynamics that test the sustainability of existing governance arrangements. We suggest that turbulent times also represent an underappreciated opportunity to examine the resilience of organizations and organized systems. Less attended to by contemporary scholarship, unsettled systems of governance offer ample opportunity for scholarly reflection, stock taking, and suggest new ways forward (Olsen, Reference Olsen2007).
Acknowledgments
The study is financially supported from three basic research grants ‘COMPOL: The Rise of Common Political Order’ (University of Agder), ‘EURODIV: Integration and division: Towards a segmented Europe?’ (Norwegian Research Council), and the German Research Institute for Public Administration (GRIP). The authors acknowledge comments from two anonymous reviewers, the editors of the journal and Katerina Potapova for research assistance.