Summary
Contents
Guide to Interest Groups and Lobbying in the United States offers a thematic analysis of interest groups and lobbying in American politics over the course of American political history. It explores how interest groups have organized and articulated their support for numerous issues, and how they have they grown – both in numbers and range of activities – to become an integral part of the U.S. political system. Beginning with the foundations of interest groups during the late 19th-century Gilded Age, to the contemporary explosive growth of lobbying, Political Action Committees, and new forms of interest group cyberpolitics, readers are provided with multiple approaches to understanding the complex and changing interest advocacy sphere. This authoritative work will find an audience not only with students and scholars, but also with policy advocates.
Intergovernmental Lobbying
Intergovernmental Lobbying
States and local governments do a great deal of lobbying in the American political system. The best-known government-to- government lobbying comes from national institutional membership-based organizations that represent generalists in state and local government, that is, governors, mayors, county executives and commissioners, legislators, and other state and local elected officials. The National Conference of ...