Insiders versus Outsiders: Interest Group Politics in Multilevel Europe
ISBN: 9780191827501
Platform/Publisher: Oxford Academic / Oxford University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: European Union;

What explains differences in the lobbying behaviour of interest groups? And what consequences do these differences have for the access that interest groups can gain to decision-makers and the influence that they can exert on policy outcomes?

Building on an unprecedented amount of empirical evidence on lobbying in Europe, this book puts forward a distinction between lobbying insiders and lobbying outsiders. Lobbying insiders, most prominently business interests, try to establish direct contacts with decision-makers, enjoy good access to executive institutions, and manage to shape policy outcomes when mobilizing the public on an issue is difficult. Lobbying outsiders, in particular citizen groups such as consumer, environmental or health non-governmental organizations, put greater emphasis on mobilizing the public or changing public attitudes, find it easier to gain access to legislative decision-makers, and have the greatest impact on outcomes on issues that are amenable to an outside lobbying campaign. The book shows that a single argument, building on group types as the main variable, can explain variation across interest groups in their choice of strategy, their access to decision-makers, and the conditions under which they can exert influence. The existence of lobbying insiders and lobbying outsiders has important implications for both our understanding of political decision-making and the normative appraisal of contemporary democracy.



Andreas Dur, Professor of International Politics, University of Salzburg,Gemma Mateo, Research Fellow, University of Salzburg

Andreas Dur is Professor of International Politics at the University of Salzburg. His research interests include interest groups, trade policy and European integration. Next to having published a large number of journal articles, he is also the author of Protection for Exporters: Power and Discrimination in Transatlantic Trade Relations, 19302010 (2010) and a co-editor of Trade Cooperation: The Purpose, Design and Effects of Preferential TradeAgreements (2015).

Gemma Mateo is a Research Fellow at the University of Salzburg. Her research on questions of European integration and interest group politics has been published in journals such as Comparative Political Studies, the European Journal of Political Research, European Union Politics and the Journal of Common Market Studies. She has also co-edited a special issue on negotiations in the European Union with the Journal of European Public Policy.
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