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%T Assessing the negotiation experience: quick accession or good representation?
%A Marsic, Tomislav
%E Ott, Katarina
%P 29-56
%D 2006
%K European Union; Croatia; accession negotiations; negotiation team; democratic deficit
%@ 978-953-6047-77-2
%= 2009-10-12T11:39:00Z
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-60774
%U http://www.ijf.hr/eng/EU4/marsic.pdf
%X This article examines the negotiation phase on two levels: First, it assesses domestic organising, the processes of adopting a negotiating position and the relevant actors involved. By a comparative analysis of the experiences from Estonia, Slovenia and Hungary, "best management" practises will be condensed. These are subsequently applied to Croatian negotiation management in order to identify potential problems. In a second step, the findings will be put into the wider context of the political consequences of the negotiation strategy, providing recommendations for alternative modes of domestic organising. It will be argued that the Croatian negotiation structure is streamlined in order to match ambitions to complete negotiations in a very short time. However, this institutional set-up concentrates one-dimensionally on executive expertise and reinforces problems in domestic representation and legitimisation. It therefore fails to accommodate to new strategic developments like enlargement-fatigue in the European Union and "euro-fatigue" in Croatia.
%C MISC
%C Zagreb
%G en
%9 Sammelwerksbeitrag
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info