Regulierte Selbstregulierung in der westlichen Welt des späten 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhunderts

[Regulated Self-regulation in the Western World from the Late 19th to the Early 20th Centuries]

Herausgegeben von Peter Collin, Gerd Bender, Stefan Ruppert, Margrit Seckelmann und Michael Stolleis

Studien zur europäischen Rechtsgeschichte 290
Moderne Regulierungsregime 4
Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann 2014. XII, 271 p.

ISSN 1610-6040
ISBN 978-3-465-04229-7


Regulated self-regulation is a mechanism of regulation, which unifies the private interests and state aims into a new arrangement of tasks. Even though this phenomenon is above all observed in a way that is related to the present, thus it can also be situated in the past. The focus of observation has been oriented toward Germany, which has a special tradition of governmental involvement of intermediate forces. On the other hand, toward the end of the 19th century, in many Western societies, a state-interventionist phase can be seen. Within these situations existing state fields of responsibility were expanded and new fields created. This was connected with the intensification of the administrative influence and legal programming, but also with a strengthen inclusion of private actors, whose were to different degrees permitted to shape things as they saw fit. The varieties of such regulated self-regulation were manifold: in addition to the integration in the corporatist concepts, one is more likely to find liberal variants, which were for the most part left the initiatives up to the private organizations, cooperative negotiation solutions or hidden forms in which the state’s decision-making prerogatives remained outwardly intact, however, discretely incorporated intermediary actors. These variable forms will be illustrated in this volume by specifically looking at Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, France, Sweden, Italy and the USA.

Inhalt:

  • Peter Collin, Regulierte Selbstregulierung – normative Ordnung eines deutschen Sonderweges?
  • Margrit Seckelmann, Regulierte Selbstregulierung – Gewährleistungsstaat – Kooperativer Staat – Governance: Aktuelle Bilder des Zusammenwirkens von öffentlichen und privaten Akteuren als Analysekategorien für historische Kooperationsformen
  • M. Mercè Darnaculleta i Gardella, Wahrnehmungen »regulierter Selbstregulierung« in der angelsächsischen und kontinentaleuropäischen Literatur (seit den 90er Jahren des 20. Jahrhunderts)
  • Edward J. Balleisen, Rights of Way, Red Flags, and Safety Valves: Business Self-Regulation and State-Building in the United States, 1850–1940
  • Stefan Couperus, Nico Randeraad, Regulated self-regulation in the Netherlands, 1850–1940
  • Sabine Rudischhauser, Regulierte Selbstregulierung im Frankreich der III. Republik: Zivilgesellschaft und »jakobinischer« Staat
  • Bruno Debaenst, Regulated self-regulation in Belgium. The case of the world of labor
  • Ilse Reiter-Zatloukal, Berufsständische »Selbstverwaltung« in der österreichischen Diktatur 1933–1938. Regulierte Selbstregulierung als Potemkinsches Dorf
  • Alessandro Somma, Regulierte Selbstregulierung in Italien in der Transition vom liberalen zum faschistischen Staat
  • Kjell Å. Modéer, Der Weg zum schwedischen Modell. Regulierte Selbstregulierung in Schweden 1880–1940 in einem rechtskulturellen Kontext.

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