Regulation & Governance
2007 - 2025
From John Wiley & Sons Bibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 19, issue 3, 2025
- Policy Growth and Its Impacts on Policy Implementation: Changes, Challenges and Chances pp. 601-606

- Yves Steinebach, Christoph Knill and Mattia Casula
- More Policies, More Work? An Epidemiological Assessment of Accumulating Implementation Stress in the Context of German Pension Policy pp. 607-617

- Christian Adam
- Mapping bureaucratic overload: Dynamics and drivers in media coverage across three European countries pp. 618-636

- Alexa Lenz, Yves Steinebach and Mattia Casula
- Bureaucratic overload and organizational policy triage: A comparative study of implementation agencies in five European countries pp. 637-655

- Dionys Zink, Christoph Knill and Yves Steinebach
- Policy complexity and implementation performance in the European Union pp. 656-674

- Maximilian Haag, Steffen Hurka and Constantin Kaplaner
- Policy growth and maintenance in comparative perspective pp. 675-689

- Christoph Knill, Christina Steinbacher, Yves Steinebach and Philipp Trein
- Come together: Does network management make a difference for collaborative implementation performance in the context of sudden policy growth? pp. 690-705

- Susanne Hadorn and Fritz Sager
- How to Govern the Confidence Machine? pp. 706-721

- Primavera de Filippi, Morshed Mannan and Wessel Reijers
- Norms, institutions, and digital veils of uncertainty—Do network protocols need trust anyway? pp. 722-739

- Eric Alston
- Trust in context: The impact of regulation on blockchain and DeFi pp. 740-760

- Balazs Bodo and Primavera de Filippi
- The Blockchain Treasury Governance Dilemma pp. 761-776

- Darcy W. E. Allen, Chris Berg and Aaron M. Lane
- Corporate Governance in a Crypto‐World pp. 777-788

- Sinclair Davidson
- Realizing a blockchain solution without blockchain? Blockchain, solutionism, and trust pp. 789-805

- Gert Meyers and Esther Keymolen
- Trust platforms: The digitalization of corporate governance and the transformation of trust in polycentric space pp. 806-830

- Larry Catá Backer
- Trusting organizational law pp. 831-843

- Shawn Bayern
- Self‐enforcing path dependent trajectories? A comparison of the implementation of the EU energy packages in Germany and the Netherlands pp. 844-863

- Simon Fink, Eva Ruffing, Luisa Maschlanka and Hermann Lüken genannt Klaßen
- Governing the European Union's recovery and resilience facility: National ownership and performance‐based financing in theory and practice pp. 864-884

- Jonathan Zeitlin, David Bokhorst and Edgars Eihmanis
- Procedural constraints and regulatory ossification in the US states pp. 885-900

- Jason Webb Yackee and Susan Webb Yackee
- Financial technocrats as competitive regime creators: The founding and design of the Network for Greening the Financial System pp. 901-916

- Eric Helleiner, Monica DiLeo and Jens van 't Klooster
- To sandbox or not to sandbox? Diverging strategies of regulatory responses to FinTech pp. 917-932

- Ringa Raudla, Egert Juuse, Vytautas Kuokštis, Aleksandrs Cepilovs, Vytenis Cipinys and Matti Ylönen
- From agents of the people to agents of authority? How illiberal populism impacts interactions between regulatory agencies and external stakeholders pp. 933-956

- Michael Dobbins and Rafael Labanino
- Core funding and the performance of international organizations: Evidence from UNDP projects pp. 957-976

- Mirko Heinzel, Bernhard Reinsberg and Giuseppe Zaccaria
Volume 19, issue 2, 2025
- Green Transitions: Rethinking Political Economy in the Context of Climate Change pp. 287-302

- Basak Kus and Gregory Jackson
- From a cultural to a distributive issue: Public climate action as a new field for comparative political economy pp. 303-328

- Hanna Schwander and Jonas Fischer
- Tackling toxins: Case studies of industrial pollutants and implications for climate policy pp. 329-348

- Tim Bartley and Malcolm Fairbrother
- Financialization and an emerging “green investor state”: Examining China's use of state‐backed funds for green transition pp. 349-369

- Kasper Ingeman Beck and Mathias Larsen
- Historical Foundations of Green Developmental Policies: Divergent Trajectories in United States and France pp. 370-382

- Ritwick Ghosh, Stephanie Barral and Fanny Guillet
- Picking Losers: Climate Change and Managed Decline in the European Union pp. 383-398

- Timur Ergen and Luuk Schmitz
- Climate Politics in Latin America: The Cases of Chile and Mexico pp. 399-421

- Isik D. Özel
- Digitalization and the green transition: Different challenges, same policy responses? pp. 422-447

- Marius R. Busemeyer, Sophia Stutzmann and Tobias Tober
- Decarbonization under geoeconomic distress? Energy shocks, carbon lock‐ins, and Germany's pathway toward net zero pp. 448-468

- Milan Babić and Daniel Mertens
- Fossil Capital in the Caribbean: The Toxic Role of “Regulatory Havens” in Climate Change pp. 469-481

- Jose Atiles and David Whyte
- The Development of Carbon Markets in Upper‐Middle‐Income Countries pp. 482-495

- Pieter E. Stek, Renato Lima‐ de‐Oliveira and Thessa Vasudhevan
- The Rise of Investor‐Driven Climate Governance: From Myth to Institution? pp. 496-510

- Rami Kaplan and David L. Levy
- Political Economy and Climate Change pp. 511-514

- Neil Fligstein
- The Green Economy and the Global South pp. 515-519

- Kathryn Hochstetler
- Climate Change and the Social Order pp. 520-523

- Jens Beckert
- Unraveling how intermediary‐beneficiary interaction shapes policy implementation pp. 524-539

- Cynthia L. Michel
- The voice of implementation: Exploring the link between street‐level integration and sectoral policy outcomes pp. 540-557

- Christina Steinbacher
- “Is Lobbying for Losers?”: Corporate Behavior and Canadian Military Procurement Contracting pp. 558-582

- Andrea Migone, David Chen, Bryan Evans, Alex Howlett and Michael Howlett
- Guardians and Spenders in the Budgetary Process: More Than One Type of Relations pp. 583-598

- Ilana Shpaizman
Volume 19, issue 1, 2025
- How trust matters for the performance and legitimacy of regulatory regimes: The differential impact of watchful trust and good‐faith trust pp. 3-20

- Koen Verhoest, Martino Maggetti, Edoardo Guaschino and Jan Wynen
- Problem exposure and problem solving: The impact of regulatory regimes on citizens' trust in regulated sectors pp. 21-38

- Yue Guo, Tianhao Zhai, Hao Huang and Luozhong Wang
- Measuring citizen trust in regulatory agencies: A systematic review and ways forward pp. 39-86

- Libby Maman, Lauren Fahy, Stephan Grimmelikhuijsen and Moritz Kappler
- Governance transference and shifting capacities and expectations in multi‐stakeholder initiatives pp. 87-103

- Johanna Järvelä
- Regulatory agency reputation acquisition: A Q Methodology analysis of the views of agency employees pp. 104-125

- Lauren A. Fahy, Erik‐Hans Klijn and Judith van Erp
- Navigating financial cycles: Economic growth, bureaucratic autonomy, and regulatory governance in emerging markets pp. 126-145

- M. Kerem Coban and Fulya Apaydin
- Disentangling Leviathan on its home turf: Authority foundations, policy instruments, and the making of security pp. 146-160

- Andreas Kruck and Moritz Weiss
- Mapping the relationship between regulation and innovation from an interdisciplinary perspective: A critical systematic review of the literature pp. 161-181

- Bruno Queiroz Cunha and Flavia Donadelli
- The Board of Trade and the regulatory state in the long 19th century, 1815–1914 pp. 182-199

- Perri 6 and Eva Heims
- Patterns of company misconduct, recidivism, and complaint resolution delays: A temporal analysis of UK pharmaceutical industry self‐regulation within the European context pp. 200-217

- Shai Mulinari, Dylan Pashley and Piotr Ozieranski
- The governing instruments for resilience in the neo‐Weberian state: The challenge of integrating Ukrainian war refugees pp. 218-235

- Andrej Christian Lindholst, Kurt Klaudi Klausen, Morten Balle Hansen and Peter Sørensen
- Why data about people are so hard to govern pp. 236-252

- Wendy H. Wong, Jamie Duncan and David A. Lake
- From de jure to de facto transparency: Analyzing the compliance gap in light of freedom of information laws pp. 253-283

- Julia Trautendorfer, Lisa Hohensinn and Dennis Hilgers
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