Regulation & Governance
2007 - 2025
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Volume 10, issue 4, 2016
- Achilles' heels of governance: Critical capacity deficits and their role in governance failures pp. 301-313

- Michael Howlett and M. Ramesh
- Global nanotechnology regulatory governance from a network analysis perspective pp. 314-334

- Reut Snir and Gilad Ravid
- Representative bureaucracy and seconded national government officials in the European Commission pp. 335-349

- Zuzana Murdoch, Jarle Trondal and Benny Geys
- Ingredients of institutional reputations and citizen engagement with regulators pp. 350-367

- Tereza Capelos, Colin Provost, Maria Parouti, Julie Barnett, Jonathan Chenoweth, Chris Fife‐Schaw and Tanika Kelay
- Making sense of the legal and judicial architectures of regional trade agreements worldwide pp. 368-383

- Francesco Duina
- Is the SEC a learning regulator? Lessons from proxy access pp. 384-398

- Aviv Pichhadze
Volume 10, issue 3, 2016
- Do parties matter in delegation? Partisan preferences and the creation of regulatory agencies in Europe pp. 193-210

- Laurenz Ennser‐Jedenastik
- Formal independence of regulatory agencies and Varieties of Capitalism: A case of institutional complementarity? pp. 211-229

- Igor Guardiancich and Mattia Guidi
- Are regulatory agencies independent in practice? Evidence from board members in Spain pp. 230-247

- Xavier Fernández‐i‐Marín, Jacint Jordana and Andrea C. Bianculli
- When doctors shape policy: The impact of self‐regulation on governing human biotechnology pp. 248-261

- Isabelle Engeli and Christine Rothmayr Allison
- When experimentalist governance meets science‐based regulations; the case of food safety regulations pp. 262-283

- Susanne Wengle
- The dynamics of doping: Lance Armstrong, the United States Anti‐Doping Agency and the regulatory governance of professional cycling pp. 284-297

- Hans de Bruijn, Martijn Groenleer and Theo van Ruijven
Volume 10, issue 2, 2016
- Dysfunctional institutions? Toward a New Agenda in Governance Studies pp. 115-125

- Aseem Prakash and Matthew Potoski
- Nonsectarian welfare statements pp. 126-133

- Cass R. Sunstein
- Accountability and global governance: The view from paternalism pp. 134-148

- Michael Barnett
- Dysfunctional state institutions, trust, and governance in areas of limited statehood pp. 149-160

- Tanja A. Börzel and Thomas Risse
- The challenges of fractionalized property rights in public‐private hybrid organizations: The good, the bad, and the ugly pp. 161-178

- Aidan Vining and David Weimer
- Congressional dysfunction: An information processing perspective pp. 179-190

- Jonathan Lewallen, Sean M. Theriault and Bryan D. Jones
Volume 10, issue 1, 2016
- The authoritarian logic of regulatory pluralism: Understanding China's new environmental actors pp. 3-13

- Benjamin van Rooij, Rachel E. Stern and Kathinka Fürst
- Regulatory dynamism of environmental mobilization in urban China pp. 14-28

- Thomas R. Johnson
- Judicial enforcement deputies: Causes and effects of Chinese judges enforcing environmental administrative decisions pp. 29-43

- Xuehua Zhang
- Prosecutorial regulation in the Global South: Environmental civil litigation by prosecutors in China compared to Brazil pp. 44-57

- Yifan Shi and Benjamin van Rooij
- Command without control: The case of China's environmental target system pp. 58-74

- Genia Kostka
- Jurisdictional integration: A framework for measuring and predicting the depth of international regulatory cooperation in competition policy pp. 75-92

- Murray Petrie
- Turning defiance into compliance with procedural justice: Understanding reactions to regulatory encounters through motivational posturing pp. 93-109

- Kristina Murphy
Volume 9, issue 4, 2015
- Different ways of blowing the whistle: Explaining variations in decentralized enforcement in the UK and France pp. 309-324

- Julien Etienne
- The “Europeanization” of the Basel process: Financial harmonization between globalization and parliamentarization pp. 325-338

- Justin Greenwood and Christilla Roederer‐Rynning
- Protecting the living: Managerialism and professional turf wars in risk regulatory death investigations pp. 339-351

- Myles Leslie
- Regulating business or policing crime? Tracing the policy convergence between taxation and crime control at the local level pp. 352-366

- Magnus Hörnqvist
- Conceptualizing and theorizing EU regulatory networks pp. 367-376

- Michael Blauberger and Berthold Rittberger
Volume 9, issue 3, 2015
- Governing global production: An editor's introduction pp. 203-204

- Tim Bartley
- Codes in context: How states, markets, and civil society shape adherence to global labor standards pp. 205-223

- Michael W. Toffel, Jodi L. Short and Melissa Ouellet
- Production goes global, compliance stays local: Private regulation in the global electronics industry pp. 224-242

- Greg Distelhorst, Richard M. Locke, Timea Pal and Hiram Samel
- Governing health and safety at lower tiers of the computer industry global value chain pp. 243-258

- Khalid Nadvi and Gale Raj‐Reichert
- Fragmented or cohesive transnational private regulation of sustainability standards? A comparative study pp. 259-275

- Luc Fransen and Thomas Conzelmann
- Correlates of rigorous and credible transnational governance: A cross‐sectoral analysis of best practice compliance in eco‐labeling pp. 276-293

- Hamish van der Ven
- Innovation and public space: The developmental possibilities of regulation in the global south pp. 294-308

- Steven Samford
Volume 9, issue 2, 2015
- Regulatory capabilities: A normative framework for assessing the distributional effects of regulation pp. 95-107

- Fabrizio Cafaggi and Katharina Pistor
- Transnational private governance between the logics of empowerment and control pp. 108-124

- Graeme Auld, Stefan Renckens and Benjamin Cashore
- Timing as a source of regulatory influence: A technical elite network analysis of global finance pp. 125-143

- Ranjit Lall
- The Transformation of organic regulation: The ambiguous effects of publicization pp. 144-159

- Alessandra Arcuri
- For fear of popular politics? Public attention and the delegation of authority to the United States executive branch pp. 160-177

- Stéphane Lavertu
- Regulatory capitalism and its discontents: Bilateral interdependence and the adaptability of regulatory styles pp. 178-192

- John Kojiro Yasuda and Christopher Ansell
- Does regulation kill jobs?: The limits of quantification pp. 193-201

- David M. Driesen
Volume 9, issue 1, 2015
- How the World Trade Organization shapes regulatory governance pp. 1-15

- Gregory Shaffer
- The iteration deficit in responsive regulation: Are regulatory ambassadors an answer? pp. 16-29

- John Braithwaite and Seung‐Hun Hong
- Crowdsourcing and regulatory reviews: A new way of challenging red tape in British government? pp. 30-46

- Martin Lodge and Kai Wegrich
- The unstable core of global finance: Contingent valuation and governance of international accounting standards pp. 47-62

- Daniel Mügge and Bart Stellinga
- Corruption and marketization: Formal and informal rules in Chinese public procurement pp. 63-76

- Ting Gong and Na Zhou
- The challenge of accountability in complex regulatory networks: The case of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill pp. 77-91

- Russell W. Mills and Christopher J. Koliba
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