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From knowledge to (supranational) influence: a learning-oriented approach to EU policy-making

European Union
Policy Analysis
Knowledge
Influence
Policy-Making
Giuseppe Cannata
Scuola Normale Superiore
Giuseppe Cannata
Scuola Normale Superiore

Abstract

Scholarship on the European Union tends to agree on the fact that the European Commission’s influence is in decline, due both to its diminished control on agenda-setting and the increasing prominence of intergovernmental dynamics. Against this backdrop, this paper proposes a re-assessment of the role of the Commission in EU policy-making from a learning-informed perspective, looking at ‘who controls what is learnt’ in the EU policy process and, eventually, which policy-relevant knowledge and beliefs guide EU policies. Bridging knowledge utilisation and policy process literature, the paper adopts learning as a heuristic of EU policy-making in order to develop a causal explanation linking knowledge to supranational influence. It conceptualises the Commission as a sui generis knowledge broker that acts at the same time as a ’learner’ vis-à-vis its knowledge networks (e.g., expert and interest groups, EU agencies, administrative networks) and a ’teacher’ when interacting with other EU institutions. From this perspective, actors’ control over learning processes comes to be a critical variable to explain influence over policy outcomes. As to make a case for this theoretical argument, the paper discusses it in relation to recent developments in EU climate and energy policy, which can be regarded as a critical case of supranational influence in a loosely-integrated intergovernmental sector.