<i>'Another excellent testimony to the steady increase in the political and academic appreciation of Regulatory impact assessment (RIA). Dunlop and Radaelli appropriately position RIA inside the broader field of good governance and comparative public policy: RIA is a matter of good policy-making and not (only) about reducing regulatory burdens. This publication is framed around valid assumptions about RIA as a highly contextualized phenomenon with stakeholders extracting very different kinds of purpose from the use of RIA. It is an important contribution to the growing regulatory governance agenda. The skilful consolidation of existing research and experiences, combined with new insights and innovations from leading experts and practitioners make this an interesting read for both scholars, policy-makers and specialists in (regulatory) governance.'</i><br /> --Peter Ladegaard, Regulatory Reform in China and the EU, The World Bank<p><i>'This impressive Handbook, with high standard contributions from thirty-eight authors in political science, economics, law, business and geography, could not be more timely. Comprehensive, well grounded in theory, well-written and thought-through, this book brings a balanced account of (regulatory) impact assessment as being not only a rational-expert instrument, but also a process affected and interwoven with political decision-making. A must-read for all those academics and practitioners across the globe interested in policy-making.'</i><br /> --Koen Verhoest, University of Antwerp, Co-chair ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance, Belgium</p>

Regulatory impact assessment (RIA) is the main instrument used by governments and regulators to appraise the likely effects of their policy proposals. This pioneering Handbook provides a comparative and comprehensive account of this tool, situating it in the relevant theoretical traditions and scrutinizing its use across countries, policy sectors and policy instruments.

Comprising six parts, university researchers, international consultants and practitioners working in international organizations examine regulatory impact assessment from many perspectives, which include:

  • research traditions in the social sciences
  • implementation, regulatory indicators and effects
  • tools and dimensions such as courts and gender
  • sectoral case studies including environment, enterprise and international development
  • international diffusion in the European Union (EU), Americas, Asia and developing countries
  • appraisal, training and education.

With its wealth of detail and lessons to be learned, the Handbook of Regulatory Impact Assessment will undoubtedly be of great value to practitioners and scholars working in governance, political science and socio-legal studies.

Contributors: C. Adelle, A. Alemanno, L. Allio, C. Arndt, F. Blanc, A. Bond, G. Bounds, P.G.H. Carroll, P. Coletti, F. De Francesco, C.A. Dunlop, M. Fazekas, O. Fritsch, F. Gains, J. Howell, S. Jacobs, A. Jordan, J.C. Kamkhaji, M. Karliuk, S.-J. Kim, T.-Y. Kim, C. Kirkpatrick, I. Lianos, D. Macrae, A.C.M. Meuwese, G. Ottimofiore, J.R. Palmer, D. Parker, A. Peci, C.M. Radaelli, A. Renda, D. Russel, L. Schrefler, J.A. Schwartz, W.R. Sheate, J. Torriti, J. Turnpenny, S. van Voorst, E. Vecchione, W.F. West

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Regulatory impact assessment (RIA) is the main instrument used by governments and regulators to appraise the likely effects of their policy proposals.
Contents: Acknowledgements PART I INTRODUCTION 1. The Politics and Economics of Regulatory Impact Assessment Claire A. Dunlop and Claudio M. Radaelli PART II APPROACHES 2. Regulatory Impact Assessment in Legal Studies Anne C.M. Meuwese and Stijn van Voorst 3. The Economics of Cost-Benefit Analysis Jason A. Schwartz 4. Interpretive Analysis and Regulatory Impact Assessment James R. Palmer 5. Compliance and Delivery Analysis Donald Macrae 6. Towards a Simpler and Practical Approach Scott Jacobs PART III TOOLS, ACTORS AND DIMENSIONS 7. Standard Cost Model Paola Coletti 8. Social Impact Assessment Lorna Schrefler 9. Courts and Regulatory Impact Assessment Alberto Alemanno 10. Gender and Regulatory Impact Assessment Francesca Gains 11. Consultation Florentin Blanc and Giuseppa Ottimofiore 12. Risk Analysis Elisa Vecchione PART IV SECTORS 13. Environment John Turnpenny, Duncan Russel, Andrew Jordan, Alan Bond and William R. Sheate 14. Energy Jacopo Torriti 15. Agriculture Duncan Russel 16. Enterprise and Competition David Parker 17. International Development Camilla Adelle PART V DIFFUSION 18. Diffusion across OECD Countries Fabrizio De Francesco 19. Cross-National Diffusion in Europe Ioannis Lianos, Mihály Fazekas and Maksim Karliuk 20. European Union Andrea Renda 21. United States of America William F. West 22. Latin America Alketa Peci 23. Australia and New Zealand Peter G.H. Carroll 24. South Korea Tae-Yun Kim and SongJune Kim 25. Developing Countries Colin Kirkpatrick PART VI IMPLEMENTATION 26. Implementing in the Laboratory: Scorecards for Appraising Regulatory Impact Assessment Oliver Fritsch and Jonathan C. Kamkhaji 27. Designing Performance Frameworks: the Case of the OECD Christiane Arndt and Gregory Bounds 28. Implementing in the Classroom: Teaching Regulatory Impact Assessment Lorenzo Allio 29. Implementing Regulatory Impact Assessment in the Real World: Practitioner Stories from the Field John Howell Index
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Product details

ISBN
9781782549550
Published
2016-04-29
Publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Height
234 mm
Width
156 mm
Age
UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
512

Biographical note

Edited by Claire A. Dunlop University of Exeter, UK and Claudio M. Radaelli, Professor of Comparative Public Policy, School of Transnational Governance (EUI), Italy and Professor of Public Policy, University College London, UK