ABSTRACT

Based on the experience of the author, an IPE scholar and former trade policy consultant at the World Bank (WB), the book offers an in-depth exploration of the EU–WB relations, conceptualized as hybrid delegation.

Coupling cross-time analyses of their interaction in the regions of the Middle East and North Africa, Europe and Central Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa with an original investigation on the coordination among the EU member states at the Executive Board of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development over the ‘voice and participation reform’ of 2008–2010, the book advances an innovative theoretical framework to assess the EU–WB joint institutional and field policy performances. Augmented PA models of delegation, role theory and performance analyses are engaged, and selectively recombined, to investigate the nature, evolution and impact of the interactions of the two organizations, both in their everyday and constituent politics. Hybrid delegation-in-motion is reconstructed, against the background of post-Washington Consensus and post-Lisbon EU, to unveil the changing division of labour between the two largest development multilaterals of the new global context.

The book will be of interest to scholars, students and practitioners in European Politics, Development, International Relations, International Political Economy and Global Economic Governance.

chapter 1|22 pages

Researching the EU–WB cooperation

Inter-organizational relations and the making of multilateral development

chapter 2|32 pages

Intersecting accountabilities

The beauty of difference and the challenge of coordination

chapter 3|31 pages

Comprehensive and coherent

Change and stasis in the EU and the World Bank's policies across the turn of the new millennium

chapter 4|20 pages

The EU's development policy and the EU—World Bank relations

The contribution of role theories

chapter 5|24 pages

Analyzing performance I

The Eurogroup and its effectiveness at the World Bank's Board 1

chapter 6|17 pages

Analyzing performance II

The EU's contributed effectiveness to the World Bank's programs

chapter 8|23 pages

Development, democracy and peace?

The EU—World Bank cooperation in the MENA region

chapter 9|23 pages

The EU and the World Bank in Sub-Saharan Africa

Declining trust, role change and the challenges of coordinating under fragility

chapter 10|24 pages

Cooperation among developers

Hybrid delegation, role change and the accountability—effectiveness trade off revisited