Decision-making in the council of the European Union. The role of committees.
Häge, F.M.
Citation
Häge, F. M. (2008, October 23). Decision-making in the council of the European Union. The role of committees. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/1887/13222
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Curriculum Vitae
Frank M. Häge was born on 14 December 1975 in Geislingen an der Steige in Germany. He studied Public Policy and Management at the University of Konstanz from where he graduated in 2003 with a thesis examining the effects of the partisan composition of government on public sector size in OECD countries. From January 2004 to December 2007, he was a PhD fellow in the Department of Public Administration at Leiden University. During this time, he taught courses on European Union politics and research methods. Besides following the PhD training programme of the Netherlands Institute of Government (NIG), he received postgraduate training from the Summer School in Social Science Studies at the University of Oslo, the ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methodology at the University of Michigan, the EITM Summer Institute at Washington University in Saint Louis, and the Summer School on Analytical Politics at the University of Zürich. His research results have been published in various scientific journals, including European Union Politics, the Journal of Business Research, the Journal of Common Market Studies, and the Journal of European Public Policy. In 2007, he won the first postdoc competition of the Netherlands Institute of Government. Subsequently, he worked as a postdoctoral research fellow at Leiden University on a project investigating the agenda-setting power of the European Commission in EU legislative decision-making. His article on
‘Committee decision-making in the Council of the European Union’ received the Europa-Award of the Montesquieu Institute for ‘the best scientific article written by a junior academic in the fields of Public Administration, Political Science, Law, History and European Studies’ in 2007. Since September 2008, he holds the post of Junior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Limerick in Ireland.