英文摘要 |
While criticizing neo-realism and neo-functionalism, researchers adhering to the epistemic community approach (ECA) emphasize the importance of original ideas in the policy-shaping process. However, they seldom justify how members of a given epistemic community are selected. Research on the ECA generally assume that members of a given epistemic community share common causal and normative beliefs, as well as a notion of validity and a common policy enterprise. Next, they continue to show that these beliefs indeed affect the final policy outcome, however, since the defining characteristics of a given epistemic community change as policy domain changes, we cannot presume members of that epistemic community share common characteristics. These common characteristics of an epistemic community have to be defined empirically. For this reason, I propose an operationalization procedure to define the common characteristics of an epistemic community and use it as justification for its membership selection. Otherwise, for any given policy, finding an epistemic community such that its beliefs will eventually affect the final policy outcome is always possible. By adopting the author's procedure, however, hypotheses of the ECA can be falsified empirically. In order to show that the author's operationalization procedure is valid, I show how this procedure applies to the economic and monetary integration in Europe an East Asia. |