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Interest Groups and other Political Organizations

Comparative Politics
Interest Groups
Political Parties
Social Movements
P179
Joost Berkhout
University of Amsterdam
Elin Haugsgjerd Allern
Universitetet i Oslo
Vibeke Wøien Hansen
Institute for Social Research, Oslo

Building: BL09 Eilert Sundts hus, A-Blokka, Floor: 1, Room: ES AUD2

Friday 14:00 - 15:40 CEST (08/09/2017)

Abstract

The lobby activities of interest groups are directly affected by the political activities of other actors, most notably political parties and social movements. Our understanding of the relationship between interest group politics, party politics and protest politics suffers from several conceptual and empirical caveats. Conceptually, we find differences between those focusing on (traditional) organizational relationships and issue-specific differences in, among others, agenda-setting. Empirically, the balkanization in separate fields of study has led to only few common research questions, such as those related to the institutionalization of movements into interest groups, or the nature of financial and electoral support by groups of (US) political parties. Why do the agendas of political parties, interest groups and social movements overlap on some issues but not on others? Why do we find strong organizational ties between parties, movements and groups in some political systems but not in others? Why are parties sometimes responsive to lobbying whereas in other times not? Why do some movements construct useful alliances with party elites and whereas other movements remain isolated? The contributors to this panel are invited to examine these kinds of questions on any of the relationships between lobby, party and protest politics.

Title Details
Making Space. A Cross-country Comparison of Parties and Interest Groups Positioning in Multiple Policy Dimensions View Paper Details
The Fluidity of Friends and Foes: A Contingency Theory on Interest Group-party Lobbying View Paper Details
Agendas and Political Organizations: Why only Some Issues are Organized into Politics View Paper Details
Legislative Co-sponsorship: Interest Groups as Hidden Links? View Paper Details