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Interest Group Society 6th edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 254 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 498 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 16 Line drawings, black and white; 16 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138691739
  • ISBN-13: 9781138691735
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 254 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 498 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 16 Line drawings, black and white; 16 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138691739
  • ISBN-13: 9781138691735
Teised raamatud teemal:
Considered the gold standard on interest group politics, this widely-used text analyzes interest groups within the intuitive framework of democratic theory, enabling readers to understand the workings of interest groups within the larger context of our political system. Comprehensive coverage includes not only the traditional farm, labor, and trade associations, but also citizen groups, public interest organizations, corporations, and public interest firms

Brief in page count yet comprehensive in coverage, the book is flexible for different class settings. The book's rich content and lean size allows it to stand alone as the centerpiece of a course, or be assigned as one of several texts.

New to the Sixth Edition











Updates the role of money in interest group activity following the Citizens United Supreme Court decision.





Covers new interest group actors including the Tea Party, Occupy, and others.





Examines new developments in key interest group arenas including health care and the environment.





Looks at the role of social media in interest groups. Adds a comparative look at interest group action, organization, and scholarship abroad.

Arvustused

Praise for the Sixth Edition

For a decade, The Interest Group Society has been my go-to book when teaching students about interest groups. It applies major theoretical concepts to modern phenomena in a straightforward way, and its comprehensive treatment of the literature is well-integrated with careful consideration of current events. This new edition does not disappoint. I would recommend it as essential reading for any course that includes a focus on interest groups.

Amy McKay, University of Exeter

The Interest Group Society has provided the continuity in my courses on interest groups for over twenty years. No one does it better than Berry and Wilcox: They weave contemporary discussions of the changing legal and political environments, 527s, the Tea Party, and Black Lives Matter into the contextual tapestry of James Madison's classic dilemma and the most recent scholarship in the field. Each edition brings a new generation of students into the fascinating world of organized interests.

Kevin W. Hula, Loyola University Maryland

Preface xiii
1 Madison's Dilemma
1(18)
Curing the Mischiefs of Faction
3(1)
Interest Groups and Their Functions
4(6)
Pluralism
10(2)
Interest Groups and Civil Society
12(2)
Conclusion
14(1)
Further Reading
14(2)
Notes
16(3)
2 The Advocacy Explosion
19(25)
The Interest Group Spiral
21(5)
Movement Politics
26(6)
Business Fights Back
32(4)
A Labor--Liberal Alliance
36(1)
Conclusion
37(1)
Further Reading
38(3)
Notes
41(3)
3 Mobilization and Organization
44(38)
Competing Theories
45(6)
Supply of Benefits
51(7)
Marketing Interest Groups: Direct Mail and Internet Fundraising
58(4)
Maintaining the Organization
62(5)
Who Governs?
67(4)
Making Decisions
71(3)
Conclusion
74(1)
Further Reading
74(4)
Notes
78(4)
4 The Party Connection
82(22)
The Advantages of Interest Groups
83(7)
Working Together
90(3)
Keeping Parties Straight and True
93(3)
Financial Support
96(2)
Conclusion
98(1)
Further Reading
99(2)
Notes
101(3)
5 Interest Groups in Campaigns
104(27)
Group Involvement in Elections
105(1)
Nonfinancial Support
106(2)
Interest Group Money in Campaigns
108(16)
Conclusion
124(1)
Further Reading
125(2)
Notes
127(4)
6 Lobbyists
131(25)
A Day in the Life of a Lobbyist
132(2)
Effective Lobbying
134(4)
Create a Dependency
138(1)
Lobbying as a Career
139(6)
Lobbyists for Hire
145(3)
Conclusion
148(2)
Further Reading
150(2)
Notes
152(4)
7 Public Opinion and Grassroots Lobbying
156(23)
Direct Citizen Lobbying
158(4)
Lobbying the Public
162(9)
Demonstrations and Protests
171(2)
Conclusion
173(1)
Further Reading
174(2)
Notes
176(3)
8 Washington Lobbying
179(22)
Congress
180(3)
Executive Branch
183(6)
The Courts
189(4)
Strategic Decision Making
193(1)
Conclusion
194(1)
Further Reading
194(3)
Notes
197(4)
9 The Rise of Networks and Coalitions
201(26)
Coalitions: Everyday Politics
201(7)
Ideological and Partisan Networks
208(4)
Issue Networks
212(4)
The Qualities of Issue Networks
216(2)
Continuity and Change in Issue Networks
218(3)
Conclusion
221(1)
Further Reading
221(3)
Notes
224(3)
10 Bias and Representation
227(15)
Corporate Wealth and Political Advocacy
228(2)
A Special Relationship
230(5)
Beyond Business
235(2)
Reform
237(3)
Further Reading
240(2)
Notes 242(2)
Index 244
Jeffrey M. Berry is Professor of Political Science at Tufts University.



Clyde Wilcox is Professor in the Government Department at Georgetown University.