Vol. 2 (2007) > lreg-2007-2

Living Rev. Euro. Gov. 2 (2007), 2

Civil society participation in EU governance

1 Hertie School of Governance, Schlossplatz 1, 10178 Berlin, Germany

Full text: PDF

Article Abstract

The debate on the European Union's legitimacy crisis led to the discovery of civil society in EU governance. With the waning of the permissive consensus, politicians, bureaucrats, and academics shifted their attention towards the input-oriented dimension of democratic legitimacy which results from authentic participation and governance `by the people'. Participatory democracy via civil society involvement came to be considered as a promising supplement to representative democracy and entered EU documents such as the White Paper on European Governance and the draft Constitutional Treaty around the turn of the millennium. However, the origins of the current debate on civil society in EU governance can also be traced back to interest group research which has flourished since the early 1980s and the debate on `participatory governance' that unfolded in the 1990s. These approaches are more concerned with effective political problem-solving and the output-dimension of democratic legitimacy which can, from this point of view, be improved by stakeholder participation and civil society engagement. In fact, two scholars who refer to `civil society' do not necessarily mean the same thing and this is even less obvious if journalists, politicians or public officials allude to civil society. In order to enhance the basis of the discussion, we should seek to identify the conceptions they rely on. This will help us to understand where different arguments come from. Hence, this essay seeks to identify the different layers of the current debate on civil society participation in EU governance by unfolding the traditions of thought academic and political advocates of civil society in EU affairs currently draw on. This essay will basically distinguish between output-oriented approaches which explore the contribution of civil society groups to effective governance and problem-solving on the one hand and research that is interested in input-oriented legitimacy and participatory democracy on the other.

Keywords: deliberative democracy, governance, participation, legitimacy, civil society

Article Downloads

Article Format Size (Kb)
468.4
442.8

Article Citation

Since a Living Reviews in European Governance article may evolve over time, please cite the access <date>, which uniquely identifies the version of the article you are referring to:

Barbara Finke,
"Civil society participation in EU governance",
Living Rev. Euro. Gov. 2,  (2007),  2. URL (cited on <date>):
http://europeangovernance-livingreviews.org/Articles/lreg-2007-2

Article History

ORIGINAL http://europeangovernance-livingreviews.org/Articles/lreg-2007-2
Title Civil society participation in EU governance
Author Barbara Finke
Date accepted 2 November 2007, published 21 December 2007
UPDATE http://europeangovernance-livingreviews.org/Articles/lreg-2012-2
Title Civil society participation in EU governance
Author Eva G. Heidbreder
Date accepted 5 October 2012, published 12 December 2012
Changes This Living Review is a completely re-written version of the original Living Review by Barbara Finke. It has been restructured and substantially expanded given the impressive increase of research on the topic in the past five years. However, the current version builds on the original text and has kept most of the reviewed work as part of this review. Thanks also to Barbara Finke for comments on earlier drafts of this revised review.
 

General Information

About