Jeffrey M. Berry’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Lobbying for the People: The Political Behavior of Public Interest Groups
  • Book

December 2015

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544 Reads

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119 Citations

Jeffrey M. Berry

In recent years there has been growing recognition of the role played in American politics by groups such as Common Cause, the Sierra Club, and Zero Population Growth. This book considers their work in terms of their origins and development, resources, patterns of recruitment, decision-making processes, and lobbying tactics. How do public interest groups select the issues on which they work? How do they allocate their resources? How do they choose strategies for influencing the federal government? Professor Berry examines these questions, focusing in particular on the process by which organizations make critical decisions. His findings are based on a survey of eighty-three national organizations with offices in Washington, D.C. He analyzes in detail the operation of two groups in which he worked as a participant.

Citations (1)


... All interest groups lobby through direct and indirect strategies (Berry 1977). In the pertinent scholarship, strategies are understood to be "overall approaches to seeking influence" (Binderkrantz and Krøyer 2012: 124). ...

Reference:

“We Need a CERN for AI”: Organized Scientific Interests and Agenda-Setting in European Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy
Lobbying for the People: The Political Behavior of Public Interest Groups
  • Citing Book
  • December 2015