Basic Interests: The Importance of Groups in Politics and in Political SciencePrinceton University Press, 1998 M03 23 - 248 pages A generation ago, scholars saw interest groups as the single most important element in the American political system. Today, political scientists are more likely to see groups as a marginal influence compared to institutions such as Congress, the presidency, and the judiciary. Frank Baumgartner and Beth Leech show that scholars have veered from one extreme to another not because of changes in the political system, but because of changes in political science. They review hundreds of books and articles about interest groups from the 1940s to today; examine the methodological and conceptual problems that have beset the field; and suggest research strategies to return interest-group studies to a position of greater relevance. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 29
... discussed, the degree of salience of the issue, the inclusion of controls in the statistical models employed, the validity and inclusiveness of the measurements used, the dynamic versus cross-sectional nature of the research design, and ...
... discussed in this chapter, we describe how scholars work- ing from different theoretical perspectives assign different meanings to the same terms, use different conventions on important elements of research design, and attach different ...
... discussed. Schlozman and Tierney, like several other scholars, use a published directory of organizations active in Washington as their working definition of an interest group, even though their review at the conceptual level includes a ...
... discussed those organizations with Washington representation , including private firms as well as membership groups . V. O. Key's ( 1964 ) definition was broad enough to include associations as well as economic interests such as firms ...
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Contents
3 | |
22 | |
Chapter Three The Rise and Decline of the Group Approach | 44 |
Chapter Four Collective Action and the New Literature on Interest Groups | 64 |
Chapter Five Bias and Diversity in the InterestGroup System | 83 |
Chapter Six The Dynamics of Bias | 100 |
Chapter Seven Building a Literature on Lobbying One Case Study at a Time | 120 |
Chapter Eight Surveys of InterestGroup Activities | 147 |
Chapter Nine Learning from Experience | 168 |
Appendix Articles on Interest Groups Published in the American Political Science Review 19501995 | 189 |
References | 197 |
Index | 217 |
Other editions - View all
Basic Interests: The Importance of Groups in Politics and in Political Science Frank R. Baumgartner,Beth L. Leech No preview available - 1998 |
Basic Interests: The Importance of Groups in Politics and in Political Science Frank R. Baumgartner,Beth L. Leech No preview available - 1998 |