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| + | [[regulatory_learning|]] | ||
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| + | ====== Regulatory Experimenting ====== | ||
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| + | ===== Definitions ===== | ||
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| + | ===== Experimentation tool decision tree [EC SWD(2023) 277 final] ===== | ||
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| + | The figure " | ||
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| + | [Source: European Commission. ‘Regulatory Learning in the EU - Guidance on Regulatory Sandboxes, Testbeds, and Living Labs in the EU, with a Focus Section on Energy’. European Commission: Commission Staff Working Document {SWD(2023) 277 final, 25 July 2023. https:// | ||
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| + | ===== What is Regulatory Experimentation? | ||
| + | "A regulatory experiment is a test or trial of a new product, service, approach or process designed to generate evidence or information that can inform the design or administration of a regulatory regime. | ||
| + | In practice, a regulator might experiment with: | ||
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| + | * Unordered List ItemA regulated product or service. This includes new products, services and business models that create regulatory uncertainty. These may be unregulated or prohibited in some way by existing regulation. The experiment might be designed to understand the implications of those innovations if they were used in the real world or assess how easy they would be to regulate using existing mechanisms. | ||
| + | * Unordered List ItemA new approach to regulating. In some cases, regulators may want to trial a new version of a regulation under controlled conditions in order to monitor its effects. For example, regulators could test proposed regulations with a specific group of regulated entities to assess their effectiveness before being formally implemented. | ||
| + | * Unordered List ItemA regulatory process. This covers a broad range of activities. For example, a regulator could test different ways of consulting stakeholders on the design of new regulations, | ||
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| + | https:// | ||
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| + | ===== Logics of Experimentation [Ansell and Bartenberger, | ||
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| + | ".. the meaning of “experiment” varies markedly .... diversity of experimentation, | ||
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| + | **Controlled** experiments primarily aim to isolate causality, while | ||
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| + | **Darwinian** experimentation endeavors to enhance systemic innovation and | ||
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| + | **generative** experimentation seeks to generate new solution concepts." | ||
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| + | {{ : | ||
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| + | [Source: | ||
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| + | ===== Experimentation Space - regulatory sandboxes, living labs and test beds (EC-JRC) ===== | ||
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| + | According the JRC science policy brief ‘Regulatory learning in experimentation spaces’ (Kert, Vebrova, & Schade, 2022) regulatory sandboxes, living labs and test beds are experimentation spaces that can generate evidence and learning useful to support innovation and regulatory governance However, they have different features that require different form of actors’ involvement and support different types or regulatory learning. The primary motivation of regulatory sandboxes is to test innovation and regulations in controlled real-world market conditions to improve legal certainty and focus on technologies mature for market deployment; test beds and living labs have as their primary motivation to develop, test and upscale innovative products or services in controlled (near) real-world (test beds) or uncontrolled (near) real-world physical or virtual environment (living labs). | ||
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| + | [Source: Kert, K., Verbova, M., Schade, S., 2022. Regulatory learning in experimentation spaces (Science for Policy Brief No. JRC130458). European Commission.] | ||
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| + | ===== European Regulatory Experimenting - overview [EC-JRC 2023] ===== | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | {{ : | ||
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| + | [Source: European Commission. Joint Research Centre., 2023. Making energy regulation fit for purpose: state of play of regulatory experimentation in the EU : insights from running regulatory sandboxes. Publications Office, LU. [[https:// | ||
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| + | ~~DISCUSSION|Discussion Section - PAGE OWNER: Klaus Kubeczko~~ | ||