New Public Governance
The central theme of the public administration research is New Public Governance. This concerns the organisation and quality of public administrations, with special attention to sectors such as security and the welfare state. With this central theme we connect with relevant developments in society, economics, government and politics and the new control mechanisms of the government, society and market arising from this. This research is conducted within two research groups:
Governance of Quality focuses on several pressing social problems, which are crucial for the quality of living together in society, and at the question of how governance structures and arrangements (could) influence this.
Quality of Governance focuses on the quality of governance and the government itself. Specifically, research is conducted into which characteristics of governance structure and policy are determining the quality of governance. Accordingly, it identifies which consequences this has for the process of achieving better governance.
In 2014, an international research evaluation committee assessed the program's relevance to be excellent (4.5 out of 5) and its quality, productivity & viability very good (4 out of 5).
Multi-layered Governance in Europe and Beyond
National and international politics have become increasingly intertwined into so-called multi-layered or multi-level governance systems. A central starting point in political science research is therefore that politics should not be studied at a national or international level, but in mutual coherence. Covering all three main subdisciplines of political science, Multi-Layered Governance in Europe and Beyond (MLG) examines the scope, institutions and agency of multilevel governance. The program's three main research questions are:
- Scope: To what extent does the emergence of multi-layered governance actually overtake or transform political structures above (e.g. inter-regional and global institutions) and below (traditional, hard-wired institutions of domestic and local government) European integration?
- Institutions: Which institutional arrangements can ensure policy effectiveness and democratic legitimacy in multi-layered settings?
- Agency: How does multi-layered governance affect the motivations and capacity of elites to adopt decisions and steer society?
All (senior) researchers in the MLG program work on at least two of these questions. This research group brings together researchers from different sub-disciplinary backgrounds: experts in comparative political science, international relations and political theory. This diversity is also highly visible in the different cross-cutting topics that political scientists focus on, such as European integration, political parties, elite networks and environmental, social and foreign policy. In 2013, an international research evaluation committee assessed all aspects of the program - quality, productivity, relevance & viability - to be excellent (4.5 out of 5).