Countries that are candidates for European Union (EU) accession face the complex and urgent task of
building administrative institutions so that they can fulfil the “Copenhagen criteria”. Such institutions
must be able to implement the acquis communautaire within tight budget constraints and ensure
favourable conditions for a competitive private sector. They must also provide candidate countries with
the institutional capacity to participate effectively in future policy-making within the European Union
upon accession. This paper lays out basic principles, tools and issues for building institutions. The target
audience includes all those involved in Institution Building within candidate countries, EU Member
States, the European Commission and the aid community.
The paper highlights the issues associated with building effective institutions while providing concrete
examples of how Member States and candidate countries have responded to such challenges. The
definition of a number of key terms (in bold type) are provided in the Annex together with links to
additional sources of information (SIGMA and PUMA publications as well as relevant web sites).
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Abstract
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