Abstract

During TTIP negotiations, the European Commission was severely criticized by civil society organizations and public opinion for its secrecy regarding negotiation strategies and priorities. The Commission responded by making some negotiating texts publicly available. This article explores the implications of increasing transparency in trade negotiations. Drawing on negotiation, politicization, and informal governance literature, it examines how the Commission’s choice for a partial transparency approach had three paradoxical effects on negotiations. First, greater transparency did not help the public perception of TTIP. Second, greater transparency increased the EU’s bargaining leverage but led to a low degree of negotiating discretion for the Commission. Finally, greater transparency transformed the nature of the negotiating process by making it more informal, allowing bargaining parties to act outside the public scrutiny. This contribution solves these transparency puzzles by showing that partial transparency is a double-edged sword. Whilst greater transparency has become an important legitimation strategy in EU trade governance, adopting a partial transparency approach fuelled public protest instead of muting it and led to the failure of the negotiations.

Highlights

  • The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) negotiations between the European Union (EU) and the USA led to an unprecedented level of contestation by civil society organizations (CSOs), the media, and members of the European Parliament (EP)

  • We argue that the Commission, by adopting a partial transparency approach, involving the public disclosure of some negotiating texts, provoked three marked—and paradoxical—consequences for TTIP negotiations

  • We have argued that the partial increase in transparency has had three paradoxical effects on TTIP negotiations

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Summary

Introduction

The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) negotiations between the European Union (EU) and the USA led to an unprecedented level of contestation by civil society organizations (CSOs), the media, and members of the European Parliament (EP). Partial transparency can transform the nature of the negotiation process by leading to the informalization of EU trade governance and paradoxically increasing contestation instead of muting it.

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