Admission requirements
Admission to the Master International Relations, track European Union Studies.
Description
Today, there is virtually no policy area that is not directly or indirectly impacted by decisions made in Brussels. From the single market to environment and from agriculture to consumer protection, name it and the EU will in most cases be competent to make binding decisions on it (shared or exclusively). It has even been estimated that currently over half to three quarters of legislation that applies on national level originates from Brussels. Legislation that can have vast consequences (e.g. costs) for businesses, public organisations and consumers alike. These realities have attracted a wide variety of stakeholders to influence EU decision-making: it is estimated that there are approximately 20.000 EU lobbyists working for trade associations, companies, NGO’s and other organizations, indicating that lobbying is an accepted and widespread part of the EU system. In comparison: there are approximately 50.000 civil servants working for the institutions
In this course you will be made familiar with the art of lobbying the EU. First, we will discuss the major EU developments that have had an impact on the way EU Public Affairs & Lobbying is conducted today. Then we will discuss the methods and techniques of EU Public Affairs along its main dimensions: monitoring, political intelligence, strategy, networks, lobbying and institutional communication. Finally, we will debate the role of lobbying in the EU system, ethics and transparency and how EU lobbying relates to democracy.
Summary of main topics:
Introduction: Major EU developments affecting EU PA; and players, powers and procedures
Structure & methodology of EU Public Affairs Management
Lobbying strategy
Stakeholder management, networks and coalitions
Communicating with the institutions
Ethics, Transparency and Democracy
Course objectives
This course will provide students with an understanding of the theory and practice of EU Public Affairs and lobbying. Students will become acquainted with different approaches, the tools & techniques and learn how to successfully work with them in a multi-level arena. This includes when, where and how to intervene in EU decision-making processes, influencing EU policy and legislation.
The course will use a variety of sources (for example books, journal articles, policy documents from the European institutions and guest speakers) and we will work on real lobby dossiers that are in the EU decision-making pipeline today. At the end of the course you will put your lobby skills in practice during a lobby game in Brussels.
Timetable
See the website.
Mode of instruction
Interactive seminar.
Course Load
Total course load is 5 ec x 28 hours = 140 hours:
Attending seminars (attendance is compulsory): 4 hours per week × 6 weeks = 24 hours
time for studying the compulsory literature and preparation for the lectures; 6 hours per week x 6 weeks : 36 hours
Writing a paper (incl. research) and presenting it: 60 hours
Lobby game: 20 hours
Assessment method
The final mark will be a combination of the following notes obtained during the classes, weighted in the following way:
take active part in class discussions (20%);
paper and presentation (70%);
lobby game (10%).
The final paper will only be marked if the student has attended the seminars.
Weighing
The final mark for the course is established by determining the weighted average.
Resit
There will be a retake for the policy paper if students have failed the course.
Reading list
The compulsory literature for weekly readings will be made available during the course.
Blackboard
Yes, see Blackboard.
Registration
Via uSis.