Blaming Europe?
Responsibility Without Accountability in the European Union
Sara B. Hobolt and James Tilley
Reviews and Awards
"This is modern political science at its very best: addressing an important and topical question (the legitimacy crisis in the EU), and answering the question with a clear theory and careful data analysis. This should be essential reading for researchers and students of democratic politics in Europe as well as of public opinion towards globalisation. Also, the finding that citizens can allocate responsibility in Europe's multi-level polity correctly if they have good quality information has important implications for policymakers, politicians, journalists and opinion formers." --Professor Simon Hix, London School of Economics and Political Science
"Does multilevel governance blur political responsibility? In Blaming Europe? Responsibility without accountability in the European Union, Sara Hobolt and James Tilley argue that citizens form judgments on the basis of information and bias. If information is poor, citizens fall back on prior EU views which color perceptions. Using a wealth of evidence they demonstrate how policy-specific information is scarce in the EU, and this deprives Europe of a transparently responsible government. The upshot is a paradox: ambiguity protects the EU from getting punished at the ballot box, but exposes it to eroding trust in EU institutions. This is a truly brilliant book that gets to the heart of EU politics in clear and compelling language and opens up new lines of inquiry concerning political responsibility in multilevel systems." --Professor Liesbet Hooghe, W.R. Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Political Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"The relationship between the EU and the citizens of Europe is troubled. Like in a crime story, a major question is who to blame, i.e. 'who's done it?' In their book, Hobolt and Tilley provide a compelling and comprehensive analysis of this intricate question. The result is a theoretically rich, empirically impressive, state of the art comparative analysis which is pushing our thinking in this field a big step forward." --Professor Claes H. de Vreese, Professor of Political Communication, University of Amsterdam
"This subtle, careful and clever book sets out to clarify a mystery - the mystery of how accountability for public policy is bestowed on public actors and institutions in the European Union... Because the problems are so carefully laid out, the solutions are quite subtle and deserve widespread consideration. This fine book should be widely read by those who are concerned about the quality of governance in the European Union and its member states." --Professor Mark Franklin, Inaugural Stein Rokkan Professor of Comparative Politics at the European University Institute; Visiting Scholar at MIT
"Hobolt and Tilley present their case with admirable clarity and concision, using a rich variety of evidence from surveys, experiments and content analysis of media coverage and political speeches. Blaming Europe is an important and timely work that is likely to set the agenda for academic analysis of EP elections." --Political Studies Review