14 research outputs found

    La evoluciĂłn del control del gasto pĂşblico en el Reino Unido

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    Integrated indicator framework and methodology for monitoring and assessment of hazardous substances and their effects in the marine environment

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    Many maritime countries in Europe have implemented marine environmental monitoring programmes which include the measurement of chemical contaminants and related biological effects. How best to integrate data obtained in these two types of monitoring into meaningful assessments has been the subject of recent efforts by the International Council for Exploration of the Sea (ICES) Expert Groups. Work within these groups has concentrated on defining a core set of chemical and biological endpoints that can be used across maritime areas, defining confounding factors, supporting parameters and protocols for measurement. The framework comprised markers for concentrations of, exposure to and effects from, contaminants. Most importantly, assessment criteria for biological effect measurements have been set and the framework suggests how these measurements can be used in an integrated manner alongside contaminant measurements in biota, sediments and potentially water. Output from this process resulted in OSPAR Commission (www.ospar.org) guidelines that were adopted in 2012 on a trial basis for a period of 3 years. The developed assessment framework can furthermore provide a suitable approach for the assessment of Good Environmental Status (GES) for Descriptor 8 of the European Union (EU) Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD).Postprint1,95

    The sustainability of local government finances in England, Germany and the Netherlands: the impact of intergovernmental regulatory regimes

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    De Widt investigates how local government financial sustainability is influenced by the regulatory framework in which local governments operate. Applying a comparative constitutional approach, the chapter analyzes the regulatory regimes on local finances in England, Germany, and the Netherlands. The regimes are investigated by concentrating on the impact of fiscal rules, and the monitoring structures in place to impose their implementation. Special attention is paid to the institutional arrangements that apply to non-compliant local authorities. The author demonstrates that growing local financial stress is partly met by regulators with a relaxation of fiscal rules, carrying considerable risks for the sustainability of local and intergovernmental finances. The chapter concludes with policy recommendations on how to improve the robustness of the regulatory regimes that govern local finances

    Learning and Change in 20th-Century British Economic Policy

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    Despite considerable interest in the means by which policy learning occurs, and in how it is that the framework of policy may be subject to radical change, the “black box” of economic policy making remains surprisingly murky. This article utilizes Peter Hall’s concept of “social learning” to develop a more sophisticated model of policy learning; one in which paradigm failure does not necessarily lead to wholesale paradigm replacement, and in which an administrative battle of ideas may be just as important a determinant of paradigm change as a political struggle. It then applies this model in a survey of U.K. economic policy making since the 1930s: examining the shift to “Keynesianism” during the 1930s and 1940s; the substantial revision of this framework in the 1960s; the collapse of the“Keynesian-plus” framework in the 1970s; and the major revisions to the new “neoliberal” policy framework in the 1980s and 1990s
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