Abstract

Based on determinants of the duration of national policy making derived from large-scale national transposition records in nine member states, this paper demonstrates that a mixed-method approach, including the so-called fuzzy set technique, can shed helpful light on scholarly findings of the European Union implementation literature. Whereas regression analysis is concerned more with the ‘effects of a cause’, the diversity-oriented fuzzy set method allows for asking under which assumptions a given causal factor might be necessary for the outcome. This paper also identifies four conditions that are usually necessary for the timeliness of legally, administratively and politically motivated national transposition processes.

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