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Corporate Capture in Europe / Kenneth Haar
Titre : Corporate Capture in Europe : When big business dominates policy-making and threatens our rights Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Kenneth Haar, Auteur ; Paul de Clerck, Auteur ; Myriam Douo, Auteur ; Rachel Tansey, Auteur ; Bram Vranken, Auteur Editeur : Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation (ALTER-EU) Année de publication : 2018 Importance : 128 p Note générale : 09.05 HAA Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : Lobby Europe UE Ingérences Politique économique Entreprises Secteur privé Index. décimale : 09.05 Europe Résumé : Excessive corporate influence over policy-making remains a serious threat to the public interest across Europe and at the EU level, warns this report by the Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation in the EU (ALTER-EU), of which Friends of the Earth Europe is a steering group member.
All over Europe, big business continues to use highly effective tools to ensure decision-makers prioritise their interests over vital public needs - be it lobbying, increasing public funding for corporate activities, the revolving door between business and politics, privileged access to decision-makers or corporations’ threats to leverage their structural economic power.Corporate Capture in Europe : When big business dominates policy-making and threatens our rights [texte imprimé] / Kenneth Haar, Auteur ; Paul de Clerck, Auteur ; Myriam Douo, Auteur ; Rachel Tansey, Auteur ; Bram Vranken, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation (ALTER-EU), 2018 . - 128 p.
09.05 HAA
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : Lobby Europe UE Ingérences Politique économique Entreprises Secteur privé Index. décimale : 09.05 Europe Résumé : Excessive corporate influence over policy-making remains a serious threat to the public interest across Europe and at the EU level, warns this report by the Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation in the EU (ALTER-EU), of which Friends of the Earth Europe is a steering group member.
All over Europe, big business continues to use highly effective tools to ensure decision-makers prioritise their interests over vital public needs - be it lobbying, increasing public funding for corporate activities, the revolving door between business and politics, privileged access to decision-makers or corporations’ threats to leverage their structural economic power.
Titre : Who’s driving the agenda at DG Enterprise and Industry? : The dominance of corporate lobbyists in DG Enterprise’s expert groups Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Yiorgos Vassalos, Auteur Editeur : Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation (ALTER-EU) Année de publication : July 2012 Importance : 21 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : Lobbying Entreprises UE Industrie de l'armement Industrie automobile Matières premières Résumé : This report examines the membership of the European Commission’s DG Enterprise and Industry advisory groups and asks whether the balance of expertise among the members adequately reflects the interests of society, or whether this advice is biased. The Commission’s advisory groups provide expert advice on specific issues, which is often used to shape new policies or even to form the backbone of new legislation. The Commission’s reliance on advice from big business within these groups has previously been criticised, with MEPs urging action to ensure more balance. DG Enterprise is one of the most powerful departments within the Commission. Its official mandate is “to strengthen Europe’s industrial base and promote the transition to a low carbon economy; to promote innovation as a means to generate new sources of growth and meet societal needs”. ALTER-EU identified 83 expert groups set up by DG Enterprise, 49 of which include non-government membership. By categorising the members of these groups according to the interests they represent, ALTER-EU found that 482 corporate advisers are represented, compared to just 255 other non-government advisors; with 32 groups dominated by big business. Discounting the 34 groups whose members are exclusively from government bodies, ALTER-EU found that meant that two thirds of the remaining groups were dominated by business interests. Just six groups had a more or less balanced composition. In contrast, the interests of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) account for just 5% of non-governmental representatives, trade unions (representing the interests of employees and workers) account for a further 1%, NGOs for 8% and academics account for 15%. ALTER-EU then examined four of these corporate-dominated advisory groups (FP7 Security Advisory Group, the sub-group on critical raw materials, CARS21 and European Business Organisations Worldwide Network) and found three of the four to be clearly influencing policy for the benefit of industry – while the fourth (EBO) clearly enjoyed privileged access to decision makers. As a result of the findings, ALTER-EU concluded that DG Enterprise needs to make major changes in the composition of its advisory groups to ensure the wider interests of society are properly served. It urged better implementation of existing rules governing the membership of these advisory groups – as well as new rules to ensure safeguards against corporate capture. En ligne : http://www.alter-eu.org/sites/default/files/documents/DGENTR-driving.pdf Who’s driving the agenda at DG Enterprise and Industry? : The dominance of corporate lobbyists in DG Enterprise’s expert groups [document électronique] / Yiorgos Vassalos, Auteur . - [S.l.] : Alliance for Lobbying Transparency and Ethics Regulation (ALTER-EU), July 2012 . - 21 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : Lobbying Entreprises UE Industrie de l'armement Industrie automobile Matières premières Résumé : This report examines the membership of the European Commission’s DG Enterprise and Industry advisory groups and asks whether the balance of expertise among the members adequately reflects the interests of society, or whether this advice is biased. The Commission’s advisory groups provide expert advice on specific issues, which is often used to shape new policies or even to form the backbone of new legislation. The Commission’s reliance on advice from big business within these groups has previously been criticised, with MEPs urging action to ensure more balance. DG Enterprise is one of the most powerful departments within the Commission. Its official mandate is “to strengthen Europe’s industrial base and promote the transition to a low carbon economy; to promote innovation as a means to generate new sources of growth and meet societal needs”. ALTER-EU identified 83 expert groups set up by DG Enterprise, 49 of which include non-government membership. By categorising the members of these groups according to the interests they represent, ALTER-EU found that 482 corporate advisers are represented, compared to just 255 other non-government advisors; with 32 groups dominated by big business. Discounting the 34 groups whose members are exclusively from government bodies, ALTER-EU found that meant that two thirds of the remaining groups were dominated by business interests. Just six groups had a more or less balanced composition. In contrast, the interests of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) account for just 5% of non-governmental representatives, trade unions (representing the interests of employees and workers) account for a further 1%, NGOs for 8% and academics account for 15%. ALTER-EU then examined four of these corporate-dominated advisory groups (FP7 Security Advisory Group, the sub-group on critical raw materials, CARS21 and European Business Organisations Worldwide Network) and found three of the four to be clearly influencing policy for the benefit of industry – while the fourth (EBO) clearly enjoyed privileged access to decision makers. As a result of the findings, ALTER-EU concluded that DG Enterprise needs to make major changes in the composition of its advisory groups to ensure the wider interests of society are properly served. It urged better implementation of existing rules governing the membership of these advisory groups – as well as new rules to ensure safeguards against corporate capture. En ligne : http://www.alter-eu.org/sites/default/files/documents/DGENTR-driving.pdf Documents numériques
Who’s driving the agenda at DG Enterprise and Industry?Adobe Acrobat PDF