Influence of Interest Groups in Politics Discussion - Humanities
It is an open book assignment; I should use 2-4 sources from the core reading or recommended reading or the lecture, however I am not allowed to use any source from outside. Also, no need for in text citations.We are advised to write a thesis statement that is one sentence long as our introduction and a one sentence conclusion. As in essays, you should make an argument, define concepts, refer to case studies and research to substantiate your argument, and provide critical analysis. You are showing the skills required for ‘critical analysis’ when you recognize the complexity of key concepts and provide evidence for your ideas and interpretations.Recommended reading:https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2019/08/09/how-interest-groups-inform-policymakers-about-what-the-public-wants/
core_reading___read_pp._247_249_and_256_260__and_read_p260_to_the_end_if_you_are_keen_on_learnign_about_social_movements__of_chapter____groups_core_reading___interests_and_movements_____chapter_11_..pdf
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CHAPTER
11 Groups, Interests and Movements
‘Ten persons who speak make more noise than ten thousand
who are silent.’
N A P O L E O N , Maxims
Copyright © 2013. Palgrave Macmillan. All rights reserved.
PREVIEW
KEY ISSUES
Patterns of political interaction were transformed in the twentieth century by the
growing prominence of organized groups and interests. Indeed, in the 1950s and 1960s,
at the high point of enthusiasm about ‘group politics’, it was widely asserted that business interests, trade unions, farm lobbies and the like had displaced assemblies and
parties as the key political actors. The interest group universe was further expanded,
particularly from the 1960s onwards, by the growth of single-issue protest groups
taking up causes ranging from consumer protection to animal rights and from sexual
equality to environmental protection. Such groups were often associated with broader
social movements (the women’s movement, the civil-rights movement, the green
movement and so on) and were characterized by the adoption of new styles of activism
and campaigning, sometimes termed ‘new politics’. Considerable debate, nevertheless,
surrounds the nature and significance of groups, interests and movements, especially in
relation to their impact on the democratic process. Groups come in all shapes and sizes,
and carry out a wide range of functions, being, for instance, agents of citizen empowerment as well as cogs within the machinery of government. There is particular
disagreement about political implications of group politics. While some believe that
organized groups serve to distribute political power more widely and evenly in society,
others argue that groups empower the already powerful and subvert the public interest.
These issues are related to questions about how groups exert influence and the factors
that allow them to exert political influence. Finally, so-called ‘new’ social movements
have been both praised for stimulating new forms of decentralized political engagement and criticized for encouraging people to abandon the formal representative
process.
What are interest groups, and what different forms do they take?
What have been the major theories of group politics?
Do groups help or hinder democracy and effective government?
How do interest groups exert influence?
What determines the success or failure of interest groups?
Why have new social movements emerged, and what is their broader
significance?
Heywood, Andrew. Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kcl/detail.action?docID=1812814.
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GROUPS, INTERESTS AND MOVEMENTS
245
Alexis de Tocqueville (1805–59)
French politician, political theorist and historian. Following the July Revolution of
1830 in France, Tocqueville visited the USA, ostensibly to study its penal system. This
resulted in his epic two-volume Democracy in America (1835/40), which developed an
ambivalent critique of US democracy with its equality of opportunity, but warned
against the ‘tyranny of the majority’. His political career was ended by Louis
Napoleon’s coup in 1849, leaving him free to devote his time to historical work such
as The Old Regime and the French Revolution ([1856] 1947). A friend and correspondent of J. S. Mill, de Tocqueville’s writings reflect a highly ambiguous attitude to the
advance of political democracy. His ideas have influenced both liberal and conservative theorists, as well as academic sociologists.
Copyright © 2013. Palgrave Macmillan. All rights reserved.
GROUP POLITICS
Cleavage: A social division
that creates a collective
identity on both sides of the
divide.
Association: A group
formed by voluntary action,
reflecting a recognition of
shared interests or common
concerns.
Interest groups (see p. 247), like political parties (see p. 222), constitute one of
the major linkages between government and the governed in modern societies.
In some respects, their origins parallel those of parties. They were the children of
a new age of representativegovernment and came into existence to articulate the
increasingly complex divisions and cleavages of an emerging industrial society.
While political parties, concerned with winning elections, sought to build coalitions of support and broaden their appeal, interest groups usually staked out a
more distinct and clear-cut position, in accordance with the particular aspirations or values of the people they represented.
It is difficult to identify the earliest such group. Some groups predated the age
of representative government; for example, the Abolition Society, which was
founded in Britain in 1787 to oppose the slave trade. The Anti-Corn Law League,
established in 1839, is often seen as the model for later UK groups, in that it was
set up with the specific purpose of exerting pressure on government. After visiting the USA in the 1830s, Alexis de Tocqueville reported that what he called
association had already become a ‘powerful instrument of action’. Young Italy,
set up in 1831 by the Italian patriot Giuseppe Mazzini (see p. 116), became the
model for sister nationalist organizations that later sprang up throughout
Europe. Similarly, the Society for Women’s Rights, founded in France in 1866,
stimulated the formation of a worldwide women’s suffrage movement. By the
end of the nineteenth century powerful farming and business interests operated
in most industrial societies, alongside a growing trade-union movement.
However, most of the interest groups currently in existence are of much more
recent origin. They are, in the main, a product of the explosion in pressure and
protest politics that has occurred since the 1960s. As such they may be part of a
broader process that has seen the decline of political parties and a growing
emphasis on organized groups and social movements (see p. 260) as agents of
mobilization and representation.
Heywood, Andrew. Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kcl/detail.action?docID=1812814.
Created from kcl on 2020-05-21 09:42:23.
246
POLITICS
Types of group
The task of defining and classifying groups is fraught with danger, given the imprecise nature of groups and their multiplicity of forms. Are we, for instance,
concerned with groups or with interests? In other words, do we only recognize
groups as associations that have a certain level of cohesion and organization, or
merely as collections of people who happen to share the same interest but may
lack consciousness of the fact? Similarly, are interest groups only concerned with
selfish andmaterial interests, or may they also pursue broader causes or public
goals? There is also the difficult issue of the relationship between interest groups
and government. Are interest groups always autonomous, exerting influence
from outside, or may they operate in and through government, perhaps even
being part of the government machine itself?
This confusion is compounded by the lack of agreed terminology amongst
political scientists active in this field. For instance, whereas the term ‘interest
group’ is used in the USA and elsewhere to describe all organized groups, it tends
to be used in the UK to refer only to those groups that advance or defend the
interests of their members. The term ‘pressure group’ is therefore usually
preferred in the UK, ‘interest group’ tending to be used as a subcategory of the
broader classification.
Groups can nevertheless be classified into three types:
communal groups
institutional groups
associational groups.
Copyright © 2013. Palgrave Macmillan. All rights reserved.
Communal groups
The chief characteristic of communal groups is that they are embedded in the
social fabric, in the sense that membership is based on birth, rather than recruitment. Examples of such groups are families, tribes, castes and ethnic groups.
Unlike conventional interest groups, to which members choose to belong, and
which possess a formal structure and organization, communal groups are
founded on the basis of a shared heritage and traditional bonds and loyalties.
Such groups still play a major role in the politics of developing states. In Africa,
for instance, ethnic, tribal and kinship ties are often the most important basis of
interest articulation. Communal groups also continue to survive and exert influence in advanced industrial states, as the resurgence of ethnic nationalism and
the significance of Catholic groups in countries like Italy and Ireland demonstrate.
Institutional groups
Interest: That which benefits
an individual or group; interests
(unlike wants or preferences)
are usually understood to be
objective or ‘real’.
Institutional groups are groups that are part of the machinery of government
and attempt to exert influence in and through that machinery. They differ
from interest groups in that they enjoy no measure of autonomy or independence. Bureaucracies and the military are the clearest examples of institutional
groups, and, not uncommonly, each of these contains a number of competing
interests. In the case of authoritarian or totalitarian states, which typically
Heywood, Andrew. Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kcl/detail.action?docID=1812814.
Created from kcl on 2020-05-21 09:42:23.
GROUPS, INTERESTS AND MOVEMENTS
CONCEPT
Interest group
Copyright © 2013. Palgrave Macmillan. All rights reserved.
An interest group (or
pressure group) is an
organized association
that aims to influence
the policies or actions of
government. Interest
groups differ from
political parties in the
following way. (1) They
seek to exert influence
from outside, rather than
to win or exercise
government power.
(2) They typically have a
narrow issue focus, in
that they are usually
concerned with a specific
cause or the interests of
a particular group.
(3) They seldom have the
broader programmic or
ideological features that
are generally associated
with political parties.
Interest groups are
distinguished from social
movements by their
greater degree of formal
organization.
Direct action: Political
action taken outside the
constitutional and legal
framework; direct action may
range from passive resistance
to terrorism.
247
suppress autonomous groups and movements, rivalry amongst institutional
groups may become the principal form of interest articulation. The highly
centralized Stalinist system in the USSR, for instance, was driven largely by
entrenched bureaucratic and economic interests, in particular those centred
around heavy industry. Similarly, the apparently monolithic character of the
Hitler state in Germany (1933–45), concealed a reality of bureaucratic infighting as Nazi leaders built up sprawling empires in an endless struggle for
power.
Institutional groups are not only of significance in non-democratic regimes.
Some go so far as to argue that the bureaucratic elites and vested interests that
develop in the ministries, departments and agencies of democratic systems in
effect shape the policy process: they serve to constrain, some would say dictate
to, elected politicians and elected governments. Such groups certainly also form
alliances with conventional interest groups, as in the case of the celebrated ‘military–industrial complex’. The significance of the bureaucracy and the military,
and the importance of the interests that operate in and through them, are
discussed in Chapters 16 and 18, respectively.
Associational groups
Associational groups are ones that are formed by people who come together to
pursue shared, but limited, goals. Groups as associations are characterized by
voluntary action and the existence of common interests, aspirations or attitudes.
The most obvious examples of associational groups are thus what are usually
thought of as interest groups or pressure groups. However, the distinction
between these and communal groups may sometimes be blurred. For example,
when class loyalties are strong and solidaristic, membership of an associational
group such as a trade union may be more an expression of social identity than
an instrumental act aimed at furthering a particular goal. Although associational
groups are becoming increasingly important in developing states, they are
usually seen as a feature of industrial societies. Industrialization both generates
social differentiation, in the form of a complex web of competing interests, and,
in a capitalist setting at least, encourages the growth of self-seeking and individualized patterns of behaviour in the place of ones shaped by custom and tradition. When their primary function is to deal with government and other public
bodies, such groups are usually called interest groups.
Interest groups appear in a variety of shapes and sizes. They are concerned
with an enormous array of issues and causes, and use tactics that range from
serving on public bodies and helping to administer government programmes to
organizing campaigns of civil disobedience (see p. 259) and popular protest.
Similarly, they may operate at a local, national, or (as discussed later) international level, or at a combination of these. However, anti-constitutional and paramilitary groups are excluded from this classification. Groups such as the Black
Panthers and the Irish Republican Army (IRA) may not be categorized as interest
groups because they sought fundamentally to restructure the political system,
not merely to influence it, and used the tactics of terrorism (see p. 416) and
direct action instead of pressure politics. Structure must, however, be imposed
on the apparently shapeless interest group universe by the attempt to identify the
different types of group. The two most common classifications are:
Heywood, Andrew. Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kcl/detail.action?docID=1812814.
Created from kcl on 2020-05-21 09:42:23.
248
POLITICS
CONCEPT
Nongovernmental
organization
Copyright © 2013. Palgrave Macmillan. All rights reserved.
A non-governmental
organization (NGO) is a
private, non-commercial
group or body which
seeks to achieve its ends
through non-violent
means. NGOs are usually
active in international
politics and may be
accorded formal
consultation rights by
bodies such as the UN or
EU. Operational NGOs
are those whose primary
purpose is the design and
implementation of
projects that are usually
either developmentrelated or relief-related.
Advocacy NGOs exist to
promote or defend a
particular cause, and are
more concerned with
expertise and specialist
knowledge than with
operational capacity.
sectional and promotional groups
insider and outsider groups.
Sectional groups (sometimes called protective or functional groups) exist to
advance or protect the (usually material) interests of their members. Trade
unions, business corporations, trade associations and professional bodies are the
prime examples of this type of group. Their ‘sectional’ character is derived from
the fact that they represent a section of society: workers, employers, consumers,
an ethnic or religious group, and so on. Strictly speaking, however, only groups
engaged in the production, distribution and exchange of goods and services can
be seen as ‘functional’ groups. In the USA, sectional groups are often classified as
‘private interest groups’, to stress that their principal concern is the betterment
and well-being of their members, not of society in general.
In contrast, promotional groups (sometimes termed cause or attitude groups)
are set up to advance shared values, ideals or principles. These causes are many
and diverse. They include ‘pro-choice’ and ‘pro-life’ lobbies on abortion,
campaigns in favour of civil liberties or against sex and violence on television,
protests about pollution and animal cruelty or in defence of traditional or religious values. In the USA, promotional groups are dubbed ‘public interest
groups’, to emphasize that they promote collective, rather than selective, benefits.
When involved in international politics, these groups are often call nongovernmental organizations, or NGOs. Promotional groups are therefore
defined by the fact that they aim to help groups other than their own members.
Save the Whale, for instance, is an organization for whales, not one of whales.
Some organizations, of course, have both sectional and promotional features.
The National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People (NAACP)
addresses the sectional interests of American black people (by opposing discrimination and promoting employment opportunities), but is also concerned with
causes such as social justice and racial harmony.
The alternative system of classification is based on the status that groups have
in relation to government and the strategies they adopt in order to exert pressure. Insider groups enjoy regular, privileged and usually institutionalized access to
government through routine consultation or representation on government
bodies. In many cases there is an overlap between sectional and insider classifications. This reflects the ability of key economic interests, such as business
groups and trade unions, to exert powerful sanctions if their views are ignored
by government. Government may also be inclined to consult groups that possess
specialist knowledge and information that assists in the formulation of workable
policy. Insider status, however, is not always an advantage, since it is conferred
only on groups with objectives that are broadly compatible with those of the
government and which have a demonstrable capacity to ensure that their
members abide by agreed decisions.
Outsider groups, on the other hand, are either not consulted by government
or consulted only irregularly and not usually at a senior level. In many cases
outsider status is an indication of weakness, in that, lacking formal access to
government, these groups are forced to ‘go public’ in the hope of exercising indirect influence on the policy process. Ironically, then, there is often an inverse
relationship between the public profile of an interest group and the political
influence it exerts. Radical protest groups in fields such as environmental protec-
Heywood, Andrew. Politics, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. ProQuest Ebook Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/kcl/detail.action?docID=1812814.
Created from kcl on 2020-05-21 09:42:23.
GROUPS, INTERESTS AND MOVEMENTS
249
tion and animal rights may have little choice about being outsiders. Not only are
their goals frequently out of step with the priorities of government, but their
members and supporters are often attracted by the fact that such groups are
untainted by close links with government. In that sense, groups may choose to
remain outsiders, both to preserve their ideological purity and independence,
and to protect their decentralized power structures.
Models of group politics
Some commentators believe that the pattern and significance of group politics
are derived entirely from factors that are specific to each political system. The
role of groups thus reflects a particular political culture (see p. 172), party
system, set of institutional arrangements, and so on. This means that general
conclusions cannot be drawn about the nature of group politics. On the other
hand, the understanding of group politics is often shaped by broader assumptions about both the nature of the political process and the distribution of power
in society. These assumptions are closely linked to the rival theories of the state
examined in Chapter 3. The most influential of these as models of interest group
politics are the following:
pluralism
corporatism
the New Right.
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