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Organizing for Policy Influence - Comparing Parties, Interest Groups, and Direct Action (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,881
Discovery Miles 38 810
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Organizing for Policy Influence - Comparing Parties, Interest Groups, and Direct Action (Hardcover)
Series: Environmental Politics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In this book, Benjamin Farrer explains how activists can influence
the policies they care about, even when they are outnumbered and
their issues are ignored. The solution lies in a surprising place:
organizational choice. Different types of organizations will be
more influential under particular democratic institutions. If they
choose the optimal type of organization - given their institutional
context - then even minority groups can be influential.
Environmentalists are a key example of how small groups can
sometimes punch above their weight. Environmentalists in different
countries have made different organizational choices. These choices
explain whether or not they succeeded in influencing policy. In the
empirical chapters that follow, Farrer shows that environmentalists
can sometimes be more influential if they form interest groups, but
under other institutions, political parties are the optimal
organizational choice. Although interest groups are often easier to
create, national institutions can sometimes insulate mainstream
politicians from niche interest groups. When institutions deny
access to interest groups, activists are forced to send the
stronger signal of party entry. Using a variety of methods,
including a formal model, an experiment, and a wealth of empirical
data from a variety of settings, Farrer proves that this theory of
organizational choice adds to our understanding of several crucial
phenomena. First, it helps explain patterns of political
participation, by showing the importance of instrumental, rather
than purely expressive, motivations for activism. Second, it
provides an important modification to Duverger's (1954) law, by
showing that new party entry is a function not only of electoral
rules but also of the rules that govern interest groups. Third, it
extends research on the role of institutions in determining policy
outputs, by showing that policy outcomes are a function of the
interaction between organizational choices and institutional
context.
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