Regulation & Governance
2007 - 2025
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Volume 15, issue S1, 2021
- Editors' Introduction: Has Regulation & Governance made a difference? pp. S3-S7

- Jodi Short, David Levi‐Faur, Sally S. Simpson, Eva Thomann and Benjamin Van Rooij
- Politicians, regulators, and regulatory governance: The neglected sides of the story pp. S8-S22

- Cyril Benoît
- The symbiotic tensions of the regulatory–carceral state: The case of cannabis legalization pp. S23-S39

- Ely Aaronson and Gil Rothschild‐Elyassi
- Accountability infrastructures: Pragmatic compliance inside organizations pp. S40-S62

- Ruthanne Huising and Susan S. Silbey
- Subterranean successes: Durable regulation and regulatory endowments pp. S63-S82

- Carol A. Heimer and Elsinore Kuo
- Beyond opportunism: Intermediary loyalty in regulation and governance pp. S83-S101

- Kenneth W. Abbott, Philipp Genschel, Duncan Snidal and Bernhard Zangl
- Designing Regulation Across Organizations: Assessing the Functions and Dimensions of Governance pp. S102-S122

- Alejandro E. Camacho and Robert L. Glicksman
- Why meta‐research matters to regulation and governance scholarship: An illustrative evidence synthesis of responsive regulation research pp. S123-S142

- Jeroen van der Heijden
- Magnetic law: Designing environmental enforcement laws to encourage us to go further pp. S143-S162

- Suzanne Kingston, Edwin Alblas, Mícheál Callaghan and Julie Foulon
- Behavioral responsive regulation: Bringing together responsive regulation and behavioral public policy pp. S163-S182

- Netta Barak‐Corren and Yael Kariv‐Teitelbaum
Volume 15, issue 4, 2021
- Assessing the regulatory challenges of emerging disruptive technologies pp. 1009-1019

- Araz Taeihagh, M Ramesh and Michael Howlett
- Why and how does the regulation of emerging technologies occur? Explaining the adoption of the EU General Data Protection Regulation using the multiple streams framework pp. 1020-1034

- Nihit Goyal, Michael Howlett and Araz Taeihagh
- Emerging technologies and problem definition uncertainty: The case of cybersecurity pp. 1035-1052

- Jonathan Lewallen
- Governance landscapes for emerging technologies: The case of cryptocurrencies pp. 1053-1070

- Andrew B. Whitford and Derrick Anderson
- Regulating human control over autonomous systems pp. 1071-1091

- Mikolaj Firlej and Araz Taeihagh
- Adaptive governance for the Internet of Things: Coping with emerging security risks pp. 1092-1110

- Irina Brass and Jesse H. Sowell
- Uncertainty, institutions and regulatory responses to emerging technologies: CRISPR Gene editing in the US and the EU (2012–2019) pp. 1111-1127

- Alberto Asquer and Inna Krachkovskaya
- Legal enclaves as a test environment for innovative products: Toward legally resilient experimentation policies pp. 1128-1143

- Stefan Philipsen, Evert F. Stamhuis and Martin de Jong
- Procedurally Robust Risk Assessment Framework for Novel Genetically Engineered Organisms and Gene Drives pp. 1144-1165

- Jennifer Kuzma
- Private authority and public policy interactions in global context: Governance spheres for problem solving pp. 1166-1182

- Benjamin Cashore, Jette Steen Knudsen, Jeremy Moon and Hamish van der Ven
- Private regulation, public policy, and the perils of adverse ontological selection pp. 1183-1208

- Janina Grabs, Graeme Auld and Benjamin Cashore
- Grounding transnational business governance: A political‐strategic perspective on government responses in the Global South pp. 1209-1229

- José Carlos Marques and Burkard Eberlein
- Disaggregating public‐private governance interactions: European Union interventions in transnational private sustainability governance pp. 1230-1247

- Stefan Renckens
- Can private governance boost public policy? Insights from public–private governance interactions in the fisheries and electricity sectors pp. 1248-1269

- Zdravka Tzankova
- Private and public authority interactions and the functional quality of sustainability governance: Lessons from conservation and development initiatives in Tanzania pp. 1270-1285

- Stefano Ponte, Christine Noe and Asubisye Mwamfupe
- How domestic contexts shape international private governance: The case of the European Accord and American Alliance in Bangladesh pp. 1286-1303

- Erin Leitheiser
- Empires built on sand: On the fundamental implausibility of reactor safety assessments and the implications for nuclear regulation pp. 1304-1325

- John Downer and M. V. Ramana
- It's economic size, stupid! How global advocacy mirrors state power pp. 1326-1349

- Marcel Hanegraaff and Arlo Poletti
- Market structure and disempowering regulatory intermediaries: Insights from U.S. trade surveillance pp. 1350-1369

- Miles Kellerman
- How parties and interest groups protect their ties: The case of lobbying laws pp. 1370-1387

- Michele Crepaz
- How networks among frontline offices influence regulatory enforcement: Diffusion and justification of interpretation of risk pp. 1388-1405

- Ayako Hirata
- Friction and bureaucratic control in authoritarian regimes pp. 1406-1418

- Kwan Nok Chan and Shiwei Fan
- Does business influence government regulations? New evidence from Canadian impact assessments pp. 1419-1435

- Louis‐Robert Beaulieu‐Guay, Marc Tremblay‐Faulkner and Éric Montpetit
- Meet the critics: Analyzing the EU Commission's Regulatory Scrutiny Board through quantitative text analysis pp. 1436-1453

- Roman Senninger and Jens Blom‐Hansen
- The re‐occurrence of violations in occupational safety and health administration inspections pp. 1454-1479

- John Mendeloff, Wayne Gray, Philip Armour and Frank Neuhauser
Volume 15, issue 3, 2021
- Power transitions and the rise of the regulatory state: Global market governance in flux pp. 445-471

- Sandra Lavenex, Omar Serrano and Tim Büthe
- Power transition and the regulatory state in large emerging markets: Norm‐breaking after the global financial crisis pp. 472-491

- Simon J. Evenett
- Domestic regulatory reform and transgovernmental networks: Brazil and China in the global competition regime pp. 492-512

- Lei Wang
- From rule‐taker to rule‐promoting regulatory state: South Korea in the nearly‐global competition regime pp. 513-543

- Moohyung Cho and Tim Büthe
- Rule‐takers, rule‐makers, or rule‐promoters? Turkey and Mexico's role as rising middle powers in global economic governance pp. 544-560

- Umut Aydin
- Regulating public procurement in Brazil, India, and China: Toward the regulatory‐developmental state pp. 561-580

- Ivo Križić
- China's new generation trade agreements: Importing rules to lock in domestic reform? pp. 581-597

- Jappe Eckhardt and Hongyu Wang
- Opening‐up labor mobility? Rising powers' rulemaking in trade agreements pp. 598-615

- Sandra Lavenex and Flavia Jurje
- India, Brazil, and public health: Rule‐making through south–south diffusion in the intellectual property rights regime? pp. 616-633

- Omar Ramon Serrano Oswald and Mira Burri
- Power transitions and global trade governance: The impact of a rising China on the export credit regime pp. 634-652

- Kristen Hopewell
- The politics of regulatory enforcement and compliance: Theorizing and operationalizing political influences pp. 653-685

- Jodi L. Short
- Experimentalist interactions: Joining up the transnational timber legality regime pp. 686-708

- Jonathan Zeitlin and Christine Overdevest
- Using human values‐based approach to understand cross‐cultural commitment toward regulation and governance of cybersecurity† pp. 709-724

- Alexander Kharlamov and Ganna Pogrebna
- Agencies without borders: Explaining partner selection in the formation of transnational agreements between regulators pp. 725-744

- Machiel van der Heijden
- Whistleblowers as regulatory intermediaries: Instrumental and reflexive considerations in decentralizing regulation pp. 745-759

- Ioannis Kampourakis
- Judicial review of regulatory decisions: Decoding the contents of appeals against agencies in Spain and the United Kingdom pp. 760-784

- Luis E. Mejía
- Political values in independent agencies pp. 785-799

- Andreas Eriksen
- Regulatory disempowerment: How enabling and controlling forms of power obstruct citizen‐based regulation pp. 800-821

- Garry Gray and Benjamin van Rooij
- Is experimentalist governance self‐limiting or self‐reinforcing? Strategic uncertainty and recursive rulemaking in European Union electricity regulation pp. 822-839

- Bernardo Rangoni and Jonathan Zeitlin
- Governing complex societal problems: The impact of private on public regulation through technological change pp. 840-855

- Nicolas Schmid, Leonore Haelg, Sebastian Sewerin, Tobias S. Schmidt and Irina Simmen
- Indexing watchdog accountability powers a framework for assessing the accountability capacity of independent oversight institutions pp. 856-876

- Mark Bovens and Anchrit Wille
- Stakeholder consultations and the legitimacy of regulatory decision‐making: A survey experiment in Belgium pp. 877-893

- Jan Beyers and Sarah Arras
- Regulatory reform in the era of new technological development: The role of organizational factors in the public sector pp. 894-908

- Soonae Park, Don S. Lee and Jieun Son
- Divisions of regulatory labor, institutional closure, and structural secrecy in new regulatory states: The case of neglected liquidity risks in market‐based banking pp. 909-932

- Leon Wansleben
- Regulatory novelty after financial crises: Evidence from international banking and securities standards, 1975–2016 pp. 933-951

- Stefano Pagliari and Meredith Wilf
- The fallacy of perfect regulatory controls: Lessons from database surveillance of migration in West Germany from the 1950s to the 1970s pp. 952-968

- Elisabeth Badenhoop
- The ratio of vision to data: Promoting emergent science and technologies through promissory regulation, the case of the FDA and personalised medicine pp. 969-986

- Stuart Hogarth and Paul Martin
- Tariff liberalization and product standards: Regulatory chill and race to the bottom? pp. 987-1006

- Emma Aisbett and Magdalene Silberberger
Volume 15, issue 2, 2021
- States' interests as limits to the power of finance: Regulatory reforms in early local government financialization in the US and UK pp. 245-261

- Christine Trampusch and Florian Fastenrath
- Mixing business with politics: Does corporate social responsibility end where lobbying transparency begins? pp. 262-279

- Alvise Favotto and Kelly Kollman
- When does open government shut? Predicting government responses to citizen information requests pp. 280-297

- Benjamin E. Bagozzi, Daniel Berliner and Zack W. Almquist
- Regulatory enforcement against organizational insiders: Interactions in the pursuit of individual accountability pp. 298-316

- Aleksandra Jordanoska
- Participation rationales, regulatory enforcement, and compliance motivations in a voluntary program context pp. 317-332

- David P. Carter and Saba Siddiki
- Mainstreamed voluntary sustainability standards and their effectiveness: Evidence from the Honduran coffee sector pp. 333-355

- Thomas Dietz, Janina Grabs and Andrea Estrella Chong
- Responsibilization: The case of road safety governance pp. 356-369

- Erik Hysing
- The political economy of local government financialization and the role of policy diffusion pp. 370-387

- Armin Mertens, Christine Trampusch, Florian Fastenrath and Rebecca Wangemann
- The problem of regulatory arbitrage: A transaction cost economics perspective pp. 388-407

- Heikki Marjosola
- Information provision as agenda setting: A study of bureaucracy's role in higher education policy pp. 408-427

- Tracey Bark
- A reputation for what, to whom, and in which task environment: A commentary pp. 428-441

- Jan Boon, Heidi H. Salomonsen and Koen Verhoest
Volume 15, issue 1, 2021
- Trust, regulation, and redistribution why some governments overregulate and under‐redistribute pp. 3-16

- Nicholas Charron, Niklas Harring and Victor Lapuente
- Can decision transparency increase citizen trust in regulatory agencies? Evidence from a representative survey experiment pp. 17-31

- Stephan Grimmelikhuijsen, Feie Herkes, Ian Leistikow, Jos Verkroost, Femke de Vries and Wilte G. Zijlstra
- Decoupling trends: Drivers of agency independence in telecommunications: An analysis of high and middle‐income countries pp. 32-62

- Işık D. Özel and Aslı Unan
- Collective action and social contagion: Community gardens as a case study pp. 63-81

- Michal Shur‐Ofry and Ofer Malcai
- Myths and numbers on whistleblower rewards pp. 82-97

- Theo Nyreröd and Giancarlo Spagnolo
- Cyber insurance and private governance: The enforcement power of markets pp. 98-114

- Trey Herr
- Toward “hardened” accountability? Analyzing the European Union's hybrid transnational governance in timber and biofuel supply chains pp. 115-132

- Christine Moser and Sina Leipold
- Max Weber in the tropics: How global climate politics facilitates the bureaucratization of forestry in Indonesia pp. 133-151

- Markus Lederer and Chris Höhne
- Business conflict and international law: The political economy of copyright in the United States pp. 152-167

- Madison Cartwright
- The local political economy of the regulatory state: Governing affordable housing in England pp. 168-184

- Liam Clegg and Fay Farstad
- Get in line: Do part‐time legislatures use sunset laws to keep executive agencies in check pp. 185-199

- Brian Baugus, Feler Bose and Jeffry Jacob
- In the shadow of sunshine regulation: Explaining disclosure biases pp. 200-225

- Thomas Bolognesi and Géraldine Pflieger
- Private facilitators of public regulation: A study of the environmental consulting industry pp. 226-242

- Dave Owen
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