Difference between revisions of "European Policy Centre"
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==EPC & Science == | ==EPC & Science == | ||
The European Policy Centre analysed the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union and made a number of recommendations | The European Policy Centre analysed the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union and made a number of recommendations | ||
− | on how to the improve the use of science by EU institutions. <ref> Editorial [http://toxminds.biz/pdf_publications/TP-Editorial-RTP-2006.pdf Science and politics: From science to decision making] ''Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology'', 44 (2006) 1–3, accessed 7th November 2011 </ref> <ref> Bruce Ballantine, [se1.isn.ch/serviceengine/Files/ISN/.../doc_10849_290_en.pdf EPC Working Paper No 17. Enhancing the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union] ''European Policy Centre'', 2005, accessed 7th November 2011 </ref> | + | on how to the improve the use of science by EU institutions. <ref> Editorial [http://toxminds.biz/pdf_publications/TP-Editorial-RTP-2006.pdf Science and politics: From science to decision making] ''Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology'', 44 (2006) 1–3, accessed 7th November 2011 </ref> <ref> Bruce Ballantine, [http://se1.isn.ch/serviceengine/Files/ISN/.../doc_10849_290_en.pdf EPC Working Paper No 17. Enhancing the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union] ''European Policy Centre'', 2005, accessed 7th November 2011 </ref> |
==EPC: Roundtable on Alcohol Related Harm== | ==EPC: Roundtable on Alcohol Related Harm== |
Revision as of 12:20, 8 November 2011
This article is part of the Lobbying Portal, a sunlight project from Spinwatch. |
The European Policy Centre (EPC) is a pro-business European think tank, founded in 1996/7. It was formerly known as the Belmont European Policy Centre created in 1991. It is committed to making European integration work and enjoys an influential position within European politics and business circles. Its members include companies, professional and business federations, trade unions, diplomatic missions, regional and local bodies, as well as NGOs representing a broad range of civil society interests, foundations, international and religious organisations.[1] The EPC defines its mission as "contributing to the construction of Europe", and to achieve this it "encourages a debate among all significant interest groups and channels the results to policy-makers". It makes no secret of placing "special emphasis on strengthening the interface of government with business". [2] The EPC is one of the most prominent EU think tanks it relies on both corporate funding and public money. EPC spokespeople often appear in the media as neutral commentators. [3]
The European Policy Centre is based in Résidence Palace 155 rue de la Loi Brussels, a formerly a luxury apartment block that now contains offices for the Council of the European Union, the European Council and some Belgian government offices. Others who use the building include media organisations, think tanks including Lisbon Council and the journo-lobbying website TechCentralStation (that Corporate Europe Observatory describes as "an aggressive US journo-lobbying website funded by companies like Microsoft, Exxon and McDonalds. The website www.Tech CentralStation.be is full of the kind of furious attacks on environmental and social legislation that are more commonly associated with radio talkshows from the US mid-west". [4] The EPC makes no secret of its pro business stance "We are action oriented and we believe that business must be more involved in public policies."[5]
Contents
History
The Centre, as the EPC calls itself, was established in January 1997 by a trio of prominent public affairs people, Stanley Crossick, godfather of Brussels lobbying; Max Kohnstamm, former vice president of the Jean Monnet Action Committee; and John Palmer, former European editor of The Guardian. In 1991 Crossick, Kohnstamm and Palmer had founded the Belmont European Policy Centre, which was the predecessor of the EPC.
The EPC's bias towards industry is well reflected in the composition of its advisory board, which together with the advisors' team helps the three founders run the Centre, and also in its membership. The Centre claims to include trade unions, but in fact the only representative is Emilio Gabaglio, secretary-general of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), well-known for its constructive approach towards neo-liberal European Union policies.
There are no other representatives of 'civil society' involved. However, the board does include six European parliamentarians, five former directors-general and a vice president of the European Commission, journalists from newspapers such as Le Monde and the Financial Times, corporate directors from Philips and Mars, and influential industrialists such as Peter Sutherland (former European commissioner and GATT director and current chairman of British Petroleum and Goldman Sachs International); the former and current ERT secretary generals Keith Richardson and Wim Philippa; UNICE secretary general Dirk Hudig, and Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa from the executive board of the European Central Bank. The EPC enjoys significant financial support from its corporate members such as ABB, BAT, BP, British Telecom and Solvay -- all members of the European Roundtable of Industrialists (ERT) -- and other large corporations such as Dow, DuPont, Philip Morris and SmithKline Beecham. In exchange, these corporate donors are provided services such as regular contact with decision makers.[6]
EPC & Science
The European Policy Centre analysed the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union and made a number of recommendations on how to the improve the use of science by EU institutions. [7] [8]
EPC: Roundtable on Alcohol Related Harm
This article is part of the Spinwatch public health oriented Alcohol Portal project. |
The EPC were asked to chair a series of four meetings intended to‘identify areas of agreement between the stakeholders as to actions that can contribute effectively to the reduction of alcohol-related harm and indicate where and why there is disagreement, and in so doing help create confidence between stakeholders’.[9] The EPC invited a number of industry stakeholders, public health NGOs the European Commission members states and academic experts. The substance of the meetings involved working through 78 issues related to alcohol policy presented by the European Commission in an informal draft of their communication on Alcohol. Each item was graded on the basis of a traffic lights system, green issues were broadly agreeable to all present and 68 of the measures were, to the surprise of health campaigners green. Seven were amber, indicating no overall agreement but that some compromises might be reached. Three were categorised as red issues where the industry simply refused to negotiate. [10]
Dr Peter Anderson, author of the Alcohol In Europe report (2006) commented “The European Policy Centre (EPC) describes itself as ‘an independent, not-for-profit think tank, committed to making European integration work’. Its independence is, of course, ensured by the fact that its prime corporate members and sponsors include InBev, the world’s largest brewer and Philip Morris International”. [11] The final outcome of this process, and other consultations resulted in the launch of the European Alcohol and Health Forum.
In 1998 Diageo and The Weinberg Group helped set up a European Policy Centre Forum. Correspondence shows a representative of Diageo trying to organise a discount for a booking made by Weinberg Group for a forum run by the EPC. [12]. Weinberg Group are well known for their work assisting tobacco, alcohol and chemical industries.
Tobacco Industry Work
According to ASH:
- "The European Policy Centre (EPC) is a well respected Brussels based think tank that BAT has used as the key consultancy group, sometimes alongside the Weinberg Group to help with lobbying to ensure policy makers are legally obliged to include tobacco companies’ opinions in European policymaking development and decision making processes. The EPC had the particular advantage that it had developed a broad profile and received funding from the European Commission allowing it to acquire insider status in policy making circles" [13]
The EPC were part of a policy network used by British American Tobacco (BAT) to make changes to EU treaties in order to minimise legislative burdens on business. From 1995 BAT organised other corporate actors, including the EPC, Shell, Zeneca, Tesco, SmithKline Beecham, Bayer and Unilever, to mount a multi-year lobby campaign aiming at shaping the EU's impact assessment, to ensure regulations would undermine public health rather than reduce the profitably of business. This rendered EU policy even more pro-business. BAT's use of a policy network distanced the tobacco industry form the lobbying efforts and obscuring the tobacco industry's involvement. The research also found evidence of tobacco and chemical industries using the changes to delay or weaken legislation to improve public health. [14] The European Policy Centre and the Weinberg Group were central to British American Tobacco's approach. [15]
BAT were also helped by a UK consultancy, Charles Barker,
- to work out the advantages of pushing such an approach at the UK and EU levels, the study says. According to the scientists, the firm warned BAT that they would need to tread carefully, lobbying through a 'front' organisation and enlisting other 'big industry names'[16]
Ultimately it was the EPC that provided the front.
David Byrne, Commissioner for Health and Consumer Protection 1999-2004 was reportedly shocked: ‘I would be absolutely astonished and would find it very difficult to believe if there was any available information which tended to indicate that the European Policy Centre was advocating on behalf of the tobacco industry – that would be shocking’. [17]
Funding
The EPC is financed by membership and subscription fees, grants from philanthropic organisations and from EU funds. In 2010 donations amounting to € 800,000 were received from three philanthropic foundations, the Compagnia di San Paolo (based in Turin) the King Baudouin Foundation, based in Brussels and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Portugal. The EPC also received an operating grant of €145,556 from the EU budget under the ‘Europe for Citizens’ programme.[18]
Affiliations
- EPC are members of the European Economic Governance Monitor which is a consortium of think tanks based in Belgium European Policy Centre (EPC), France Institut Francais des Relation Internationales (IFRI), the French Institute of International Relations; Italy Istituto per gli Studi di Politica Internazionale (ISPI), the Institute for International Political Studies; Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP) the German Institute of International and Security Affairs; and in the UK, Chatham House. [19]
- The Weinberg Group
People
Advisory council Circa 2011
People
Advisory council
- Peter Sutherland (President); Chairman, Goldman Sachs International; Chairman of BP plc
- Lord Kerr of Kinlochard, John Kerr (Vice-President) Former UK Ambassador to the EU
- Erika Mann (Vice-President) Senior Fellow, Atlantic Council; former Member of European Parliament
- David Arkless Senior Vice-President Corporate Affairs, Manpower Inc
- Leszek Balcerowicz Former Chairman of the National Bank of Poland
- Jaimini Bhagwati Ambassador, Embassy of India to the Kingdom of Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg & The Mission of India to the European Union
- Hans Blix Chairman, Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission
- Olivier Boutellis-Taft Chief Executive, Federation of European Accountants
- Vladimir Chizhov Ambassador, Permanent Representation of the Russian Federation to the European Communities
- Philippe de Buck Director General, BUSINESSEUROPE
- Andrew Duff Member of the European Parliament
- Pal Dunay Director, Teleki Laslo Institute, Budapest
- Jan Eliasson Former Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden and President of the United Nations General Assembly
- José Gregório Faria Special Adviser, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian
- Piero Gastaldo Secretary General, Compagnia di San Paolo
- Hanns Glatz Partner, CNC - Communications & Network Consulting AG
- Sylvie Goulard Associated Research Fellow at CERI (Paris); Teacher at Sciences Po (Paris) and College of Europe (Brussels) Member of European Parliament President of European Movement in France
- Rolf Gustavsson Correspondent, Svenska Dagbladet
- Ross Hornby Ambassador, Canadian Mission to the European Union
- Danuta Maria Hübner Member of the European Parliament; former European Commissioner for Regional Policy
- Hywel Ceri Jones Former Chairman of the European Policy Centre, Director of the Network of European Foundations (NEF)
- Jan Karlsson Former Minister for Migration and Development Cooperation; former Co-Chair of the Global Commission for International Migration
- Craig Kennedy President, German Marshall Fund of the United States
- Gerald Knaus President of the Executive Board, European Stability Institute
- Joost Lagendijk Senior Adviser, Istanbul Policy Center
- Allan Larsson Former European Commission Director-General for DG Employment
- Erkki Liikanen Chairman of the Board, Finland's Bank; former European Commissioner for Enterprise and Information Society
- Donald MacInnes Chief Executive, Scotland Europa
- Alan Mayhew Jean Monnet Professor and Professorial Fellow, Sussex European Institute, University of Sussex
- Rory Montgomery Ambassador, Permanent Representation of Ireland to the European Union
- John Monks Secretary-General of European Trade Union Confederation
- Rainer Mûnz Head of Research & Development, Erste Bank
- Jan Niessen Director, Migration Policy Group
- Dáithí O'Ceallaigh Director General, Institute of European Affairs, Dublin
- Dick Oosting Chief Executive Officer, European Council of Foreign Relations
- John Palmer Former Political Director, European Policy Centre
- Wim Philippa Secretary-General, European Round Table of Industrialists
- Poul Nyrup Rasmussen Former President of the Party of European Socialists, European Parliament
- Scott C Ratzan Vice President, Global Health, Johnson & Johnson
- Maria João Rodrigues Professor of Economics at the University of Lisbon, Member of the European Employment Task Force
- Eberhard Sandschneider Otto-Wolff-Director, Research Institute, German Council on Foreign Relations
- André Sapir Professor of Economics, ECARES, Université Libre de Bruxelles
- Witold Sartorius Co-ordinator of Programmes, Foundation for Economic Education, Warsaw
- Jacek Saryusz-Wolski Chairman of European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs
- Wolfgang Schüssel Former Federal Chancellor of Austria
- Peter Semneby Former EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus
- Jamie Shea Deputy Assistant Secretary General for Emerging Security Challenges, NATO
- Larry Stone President Group Public and Government Affairs, BT
- Ingmar Streese Head of Public Affairs Europe, Mars, Public Affairs Europe
- Rita Süssmuth President, German Bundestag
- Pavel Swieboda President, demosEUROPA – Centre for European Strategy
- Luc Tayart de Borms Managing Director, King Baudouin Foundation
- François Trémeaud Former Executive Director, International Labour Organization
- Loukas Tsoukalis President, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy
- John Vassallo Director of External Affairs, Microsoft EMEA
- Antonio Vitorino Former European Commissioner for Justice and Home Affairs
- Helen Wallace Director, European University Institute, Florence, School of Economics and Political Science London School of Economics
- Graham Watson Member of the European Parliament
- Monika Wulf-Mathies Managing Director Policy and Environment, Deutsche Post World Net; Adviser to Germany's Chancellor; former European Commissioner for Regional Policy.
Former Advisory Council Members
- Max Kohnstamm (Honorary President); Former Vice-President of the Jean Monnet Action Committee; former President of the European University Institute, Florence
- Karel Van Miert (Vice-President); Former European Commissioner for Competition Policy
- Antonio Vitorino (Vice-President); Former European Commissioner for Justice and Home Affairs
- Stephen Badger Vice-President, Mars Incorporated
- Antony Burgmans Chairman of Unilever NV; Vice-Chairman of Unilever plc
- HE Dipak Chatterjee Ambassador of India to Belgium and Luxembourg and to the European Union
- Philippe de Schoutheete de Tervarent Former Permanent Representative of Belgium to the EU
- Stéphane Ducable Director of External Affairs, Microsoft EMEA
- Alan Dukes Director General, Institute of European Affairs, Dublin
- Gareth Evans President, International Crisis Group
- Xavier Gizard General Secretary, Conférence des Régions Périphériques Maritimes d'Europe
- Tony Long Director, WWF European Policy Office
- Rory Macmillan Director, Government Affairs - EMEA, Nike
- Erika Mann Member of the European Parliament; Chair of Management Committee of Transatlantic Policy Network
- Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa Former Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank
- Robin Pauley President, European Affairs, BT Group
- Gaëtane Ricard-Nihoul Secretary-General, Notre Europe
- Sir David Sieff Non-Executive Director, Marks & Spencer
- Maja Wessels Senior Vice-President Government Relations, Honeywell
Membership
Circa 2011
Platinum membership is the highest offered by the EPC, however it appears that you are unable to pay for platinum level entry. Subscription charges are for one year’s membership. Gold membership is open to large multi-national businesses and costs €10, 000 per annum; silver membership is open to medium sized businesses and costs €5, 000 each year, while bronze membership is open to small businesses and costs €2,500. Professional and Business association membership costs€1 000. Foundations and Religious organisations can subscribe for €500. Diplomatic Representations are open to missions, embassies and permanent representations the subscription cost ranges between €500 and €1 250. For Inter-Governmental and Governmental Organisations Regional Bodies and Local Authorities subscription costs €1 000 NGOs can join for €500 while Platforms of Non-Governmental Organisations costs slightly more at €1 000. [20]
Members listed on The EPC's Website include:
- 5 Platinum Members: BT, Johnson & Johnson, Manpower, Mars (founder company), Microsoft
- Former Platinum Members: Accenture | Honeywell | Marks & Spencer (founder) Nike | Unilever
- 53 Gold Members: ABB Europe | Air Liquide | Amgen | BASF Aktiengesellschaft | BAT | Boeing | BP | CEZ Group | COWI A/S | DAIMLER AG | Deutsche Post DHL | Deutsche Telekom | Dow | DuPont | Elia System Operator | EMBRAER, Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica | eni | Ernst and Young Europe | ExxonMobil | Ferrero Group - Soremartec | Finmeccanica | GE | GlaxoSmithKline | Goldman Sachs | IKEA | Intel | International Business Machines of Belgium (IBM Belgium) | Kraft Foods International | LUKOIL Belgium | Michelin | Nestlé | Nokia Corporation | Norsk Hydro ASA | OMV Aktiengesellschaft | Oracle Corporation | Philip Morris International | Philips | Procter & Gamble | RTL Group | Sanofi-Aventis | Solvay | Statoil ASA | Suez Environnement | Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd | Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson | Telenor ASA | Total | Toyota | Türk Telekom | United Technologies | UPS | Vodafone | White & Case
- 3 Silver Members: APCO Worldwide | EPPA | Trans Adriatic Pipeline
- 16 Bronze Members: Burson-Marsteller | Corporate Public & Strategy Advisory Group (CPS) | Edelman ¦ The Centre | FIPRA | Fleishman-Hillard | FTI Consulting | GALLUP | GPlus Europe | Grayling | Hill & Knowlton | IFOK GmbH | Kreab Gavin Anderson | MHP Communications | Nicholas Phillips Associates | The Brussels Office | Weber Shandwick
- 76 Professional & Business Associations: American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union (AmCham EU) | Assemblée des Chambres Françaises de Commerce et d'Industrie (ACFCI) | Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) | Association of Commercial TV in Europe (ACT) | Association of European Chambers of Commerce & Industry (EUROCHAMBRES) | Association of Greek Tourism Enterprises (SETE) | Brazilian Business Affairs | Brussels Office of the Swedish Trade Unions | BUSINESSEUROPE | CEFIC | Comité des Fabricants de Levure de Panification de l'Union Européenne (COFALEC) | Confederation of British Industry (CBI) | Confederation of Businessmen and Industrialists of Turkey (TUSKON) | Confederation of Danish Industry (DI) | Confederation of European Community Cigarette Manufacturers (CECCM) | Confederation of European Paper Industries (CEPI) | Confederation of Finnish Industries EK | Confederation of Netherlands Industry and Employers (VNO-NCW) | Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (NHO) | Confederation of Swedish Enterprise | Danish Chamber of Commerce | Delegation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry Paris/Ile de France | EUCOMED | EU-Japan Centre for Industrial cooperation | EuroCommerce | EuropaBio | European Automobile Manufacturers Association (ACEA) | European Cement Association (CEMBUREAU) | European Coil Coating Association (ECCA) | European Committe for Cooperation of the Machine Tool Industries (CECIMO) | European Confederation of Private Employment Agencies (Euro-CIETT) | European Cosmetic Toiletry and Perfumery Association (COLIPA) | European Crop Protection Association (ECPA) | European Dairy Association (EDA) | European Federation for Retirement Provision (EFRP) | European Federation of Accountants (FEE)| European Federation of the Ceramics Industry (CERAME-UNIE)| European Financial Services Round Table (EFR) | European Flavour and Fragrance Association (EFFA) | European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD) | European Landowners' Organisation (ELO) | European Livestock and Meat Trading Union (UECBV) | European Organisation for Packaging and the Environment (EUROPEN) | European Petroleum Industry Association (EUROPIA) | European Round Table of Industrialists (ERT) | European Smart Metering Industry Group (ESMIG) | European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) | European Tyre & Rubber Manufacturers' Association (ETRMA) | Fédération des Entreprises de Belgique (FEB) | Fertilizers Europe | Foreign Trade Association (FTA) | Gas Infrastructure Europe (GIE) | German Savings Banks and Giro Association (Deutscher Sparkassen und Giroverband) (DSGV) | Industrial Minerals Association (IMA-Europe) | International Federation for Animal Health (IFAH) | International Federation of Reproduction Rights Organisations (IFRRO) | International Fur Trade Federation (IFTF) | International Rayon and Synthetic Fibres Committee (CIRFS) | Irish Business Bureau (IBB) | Japan Center for International Finance (JCIF) | Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO Brussels Center) | ORGALIME | PostEurop | Swiss Business Federation (economiesuisse) | The Brewers of Europe | The Confederation of Danish Employers (DA) | The Danish Association of Lawyers and Economists in Belgium (DJØF Belgium) | The European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) | The Institute for the Accountancy Profession Sweden (Far AB)| The Oil Companies' European Organisation for Environment, Health and Safety (CONCAWE) | The Swedish Confederation of Professional Employees | Turkish Industry & Business Association (TÜSIAD) | Unico Banking Group | Union of EU Soft Drinks Associations (UNESDA-CISDA) | U.S. Chamber of Commerce | Verband der Chemischen Industrie (VCI) |
- 27 FOUNDATIONS: Bertelsmann Stiftung | British Council Brussels | Centre for European Studies | Compagnia di San Paolo | EGMONT - The Royal Institute for International Relations | European Climate Foundation | European Cultural Foundation (ECF) | European Foundation Centre (EFC) | European Foundation for Democracy | European Institute of Public Administration (EIPA) | Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung | Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian | Fundación Academia Europea de Yuste | Fundación Tres Culturas del Mediterráneo | Generation Europe | Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung | Institute of European Affairs (IEA) | King Baudouin Foundation | Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung | Madariaga European Foundation | Nationale Postcode Loterij | Open Society Institute – Brussels | Secure World Foundation (SWF) | Stiftung Mercator | Swedish Entrepreneurship Forum | Transatlantic Policy Network (TPN) | Ukrainian Foundation for Democracy "People First"
- 4 GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS: Bundesagentur für Arbeit | European Institute of Romania | Finnish Innovation Fund, (SITRA) | Representative Office of the Oesterreichische Nationalbank
- 15 INTER-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS: Council of Europe | EFTA Secretariat | EFTA Surveillance Authority (ESA) | European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) | European Investment Bank (EIB) | International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD) | International Institute of Administrative Sciences (IIAS) | International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Japan Bank for International Cooperation | NATO Parliamentary Assembly | Regional Cooperation Council | Secretariat of the Energy Charter | United Nations Office in Brussels| World Bank EU Office | World Health Organization (WHO)
- 58 NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS: AARP | Action for Global Health Brussels | ADEME | Amnesty International | ARI Movement | CARE for Europe | Caritas Catholica Vlaanderen | Caritas Europa | Central Europe Energy Partners | CHP (Turkish social democratic party) EU Office | Club of Madrid | Confrontations Europe | DCAF Brussels | EastWest Institute | Equality and Human Rights Commission | EU-Georgia Business Council (EUGBC) | EU-Japan Forum | EU-Korea Institute (EKI) | EurActiv.com | EuroAcademic - European Academic Studies Center | European Academy of Sciences and Arts | European Bahá'í Business Forum | European Centre for Research in Africa, Asia and Latin America (ECRAAL) | European Confederation of Junior Enterprises (JADE) | European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) | European Forum of Muslim Women | European Movement - Cyprus Council | European Office of Cyprus | European Renewable Energies Federation (EREF) | European Stability Initiative | European Youth Forum | EU Ukraine Business Council | Federation of Associations for Hunting and Conservation of the EU (FACE) | Federation of Islamic organisations in Europe (FIOE) | Independent Diplomat | Institute for Economics and Peace | Institute for European Environmental Policy | Institute for Historical Justice and Reconciliation | Institute for International and European Policy | Institute of European Studies Macau | Intercultural Dialogue Platform (IDP) | International Association for Human Values | International Center for Transitional Justice | International Crisis Group (ICG) | International Security Information Service Europe (ISIS) | Network of European Foundations for Innovative Cooperation (NEF) ) | NGO "Corporate Relations Research Center" | ONE | Platform of European Social NGOs | Search for Common Ground | The Danish European Movement | The European Azerbaijan Society| The German Marshall Fund of the United States | The International Fund for Cooperation and Partnership "Black Sea-Caspian Sea" | The Pew Environment Group | The World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) | Transparency International | WWF European Policy Office
- 37 REGIONAL BODIES AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES: Assembly of European Regions (AER) | Central Denmark EU Office | City of Aarhus | City of Vienna - Liaison Office | Conférence des Régions Périphériques Maritimes d'Europe (CRPM) | East-Netherlands Provinces | East Sweden EU Office | EUROCITIES | European Affairs Fund | Fundación Galicia Europa | Government of Catalonia – Representation to the EU | Hanse-Office | Helsinki EU Office | Ile-de-France - Europe | Liaison Agency Flanders -Europe | Mid-Norway European Office | North Norway European Office | North Sweden | Office of the Northern Ireland Executive | Oslo Region European Office | Province of Limburg | Representation Office of Carinthia | Representation of Lower Saxony to the EU | Representation of the Free State of Bavaria to the European Union | Representation of the State of Baden-Württemberg to the European Union | Representation of the State of Bremen to the EU | Republic of Srpska Representation in Brussels | Scotland Europa | Scottish Government EU Office | Skåne European Office | South Denmark European | Steiermark-Büro | Tampere Region EU Office | Turkish Cypriot Representation in Brussels | TURKU-Southwest Finland European Office | West Finland European Office | West Norway Office | West Sweden EU and Representation Office
- 6 Religious Organisations: Church and Society Commission of CEC | Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the EC (COMECE) European Evangelical Alliance | Jesuit European Office, Brussels (OCIPE) | Jesuit Refugee Service – Europe | Rabbinical Centre of Europe
- 3 Others: Aarhus University, Denmark | International Committee of the Red Cross | Maastricht University [21]
Resources, Publications, Contact, Notes
Resources
- Corporate Europe Observatory EUROPEAN THINK TANK SERIES Part One: The European Policy Centre, Corporate Europe Observer, Issue 2, October 1998
Notes
- ↑ European Policy Centre, About Us: Mission Statement accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ European Policy Centre, About Us: Mission Statement accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ Corporate Europe Observatory, Lobby Planet: Brussels the EU Quarter July 2005, accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ Corporate Europe Observatory, Lobby Planet: Brussels the EU Quarter July 2005, accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ Quoted in "Crossing the Business and Political Divide", by Rory Watson, the European Voice 9-15 July 1998.
- ↑ Corporate Europe Observatory, Lobby Planet: Brussels the EU Quarter July 2005, accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ Editorial Science and politics: From science to decision making Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology, 44 (2006) 1–3, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Bruce Ballantine, EPC Working Paper No 17. Enhancing the role of science in the decision-making of the European Union European Policy Centre, 2005, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Corporate Europe Observatory, Part One: The European Policy Centre European Think Tank Series, Issue 2, October 1998,
- ↑ EPC The EPC Last Accessed July 2007
- ↑ Anderson & Baumberg, Alcohol Policy: Who should sit at the table? Addiction Volume 102, No. 2 pp 335-336 (online subscription required)
- ↑ Legacy Library, Fax to Sarah Bennett BLRA from Andrea Livett of Diageo 10th March 1998, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ ASH, Smoke Filled Room 2010, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Katherine E. Smith Gary Fooks, Jeff Collin, Heide Weishaar, Sema Mandal1, Anna B. Gilmore, Working the System”—British American Tobacco's Influence on the European Union Treaty and Its Implications for Policy: An Analysis of Internal Tobacco Industry Documents Public Library of Science, 12th January 2010, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Leigh Phillips, Big tobacco distorted EU treaty, scientists say EUobserver 13th January 2010, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Katherine E. Smith1 Gary Fooks, Jeff Collin, Heide Weishaar, Sema Mandal1, Anna B. Gilmore, Working the System”—British American Tobacco's Influence on the European Union Treaty and Its Implications for Policy: An Analysis of Internal Tobacco Industry Documents Public Library of Science, 12th January 2010, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ Campaign against Euro-federalism, Working the system Lobbying by transnational corporations May/June 2011 (no. 123), accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ European Union, European Policy Centre Transparency Register, 29th July 2011, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ European Union, European Policy Centre Transparency Register, 29th July 2011, accessed 7th November 2011
- ↑ European Policy Centre, Benefits & Fees accessed 1st November 2011
- ↑ EPC, Our Members accessed 1st November 2011