Really Responsive Regulation

Authors

  • Robert Baldwin,

    1. Law Department, London School of Economics and Political Science
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  • Julia Black

    1. Law Department, London School of Economics and Political Science
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    • aLaw Department, London School of Economics and Political Science. We are grateful to all those at the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) who cooperated with our research into their enforcement activities in 2005. We are also grateful to Christine Parker for her comments on an earlier draft of this paper. A note on methodology is given below, n 15.


Abstract

Really Responsive Regulation seeks to add to current theories of enforcement by stressing the case for regulators to be responsive not only to the attitude of the regulated firm but also to the operating and cognitive frameworks of firms; the institutional environment and performance of the regulatory regime; the different logics of regulatory tools and strategies; and to changes in each of these elements. The approach pervades all the different tasks of enforcement activity: detecting undesirable or non-compliant behaviour; developing tools and strategies for responding to that behaviour; enforcing those tools and strategies; assessing their success or failure; and modifying them accordingly. The value of the approach is shown by outlining its potential application to UK environmental and fisheries controls. Putting the system into effect is itself challenging but failing to regulate really responsively can constitute an expensive process of shooting in the dark.

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