“…Amongst the first to apply the framework was Zahariadis (2008) who argued that EU policy outputs are the result of the interaction of the streams. Since then, the framework has been applied to a number of EU policies including: sugar (Ackrill & Kay, 2011), quality of life indicators (Bache, 2013), cohesion (Becker, 2019; Engl & Evrard, 2020), economic policy (Copeland & James, 2014; Saurugger & Terpen, 2016; Schön‐Quinlivan & Scipioni, 2017), banking (De Rynck, 2016), data protection (Goyal et al ., 2021), natural gas regulation (Herweg, 2016), children's rights policy (Iusmen, 2012), counter‐terrorism (Kaunert & Léonard, 2019), digital tax proposals (Lips, 2020), biofuels policy (Palmer, 2015), and tax avoidance (Roland, 2020).…”