In: Acta politica: AP ; international journal of political science ; official journal of the Dutch Political Science Association (Nederlandse Kring voor Wetenschap der Politiek), Band 18, Heft 1, S. 92-99
In this article, multilevel governance (MLG) is problematized & treated as a dependent variable. It is argued that processes of globalization shed considerable light on the development of MLG. In order to conceptualize "globalization," I turn to the field of international political economy, specifically, neo-Gramscian critical theory. Since critical theory seems to outline -- above all -- the distinctive political & policy aspects of globalization, the approach gives way to the development of a causal link between globalization & governance. The relevance of globalization to governance & MLG is further shown by elaborating on a particular level of governance: the subnational sphere of the city. It is concluded that critical theory is indeed relevant in explaining globalization & governance, & that a macroperspective can be used in conjunction with a more meso-style, MLG approach. Adapted from the source document.
This is a derivative work based on Paracrawl release 9 English-Dutch (https://paracrawl.eu/). This version of the corpus includes a set of probabilities corresponding to the affinity of each segment pair to a specific Digital Service Infrastructure (DSI), which includes Cybersecurity, Electronic Exchange of Social Security Information, E-health, E-justice, Europeana, Online Dispute Resolution, Open Data Portal and Safer Internet. The model that assigned the probabilities is a fine-tuned pre-trained language model (DeBERTa-v3-large), trained on a crawled corpus of English DSI-specific texts. More information is available on the corresponding GitHub page: https://github.com/RikVN/DSI. The rest of the information in the original version of the corpus remained unchanged. Notice and take down: Should you consider that our data contains material that is owned by you and should therefore not be reproduced here, please: (1) Clearly identify yourself, with detailed contact data such as an address, telephone number or email address at which you can be contacted. (2) Clearly identify the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed. (3) Clearly identify the material that is claimed to be infringing and information reasonably sufficient in order to allow us to locate the material. (4) Please write to the contact person for this resource whose email is available in the full item record. We will comply with legitimate requests by removing the affected sources from the next release of the corpus. This action has received funding from the European Union's Connecting Europe Facility 2014-2020 - CEF Telecom, under Grant Agreement No. INEA/CEF/ICT/A2020/2278341. This communication reflects only the author's view. The Agency is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.