This paper explains how institutional conditions in the European Parliament’s committees shape lobbyists’ strategic behaviour. Committees’ informal organization and formal procedures structure both the distribution of legislative influence and the opportunity to obtain advocacy. It is demonstrated how influence and, by implication, lobbying activity are skewed in favour of a committee elite. Here new evidence is provided to highlight the significant impact that open amendments play in a committee’s final report. The theory also emphasizes the role that message quality plays in the decision about who to lobby, and defines the limits to lobbyists’ preference to obtain advocacy from friendly legislators. Analysis is carried out on data obtaine...
Different types of interest groups use different lobbying strategies. This article presents an inves...
The recent empowerment of the European Parliament makes this a timely study of the impact of its int...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...
This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group representation in the European Parl...
Published on 14 April 2019This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group represent...
In their pursuit of political influence, interest groups face the choice to contact policy elites di...
This thesis is comprised of three papers, each making a distinctive theoretical and empirical contr...
Due to the politicization of much policymaking in the European Union (EU) and the growing competence...
This article develops and tests a theory of party group lobbying that demonstrates how the European ...
In their pursuit of political influence, interest groups face the choice to contact policy elites di...
Due to the politicization of much policymaking in the European Union (EU) and the growing competence...
We outline a conceptual framework that identifies and characterizes the contextual nature of interes...
What explains Members of European Parliament's (MEPs’) decisions to recognize some interest groups a...
Based on the assumption that lobbying practice is a product of its operational environment, the thes...
This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group representation in the European Parl...
Different types of interest groups use different lobbying strategies. This article presents an inves...
The recent empowerment of the European Parliament makes this a timely study of the impact of its int...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...
This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group representation in the European Parl...
Published on 14 April 2019This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group represent...
In their pursuit of political influence, interest groups face the choice to contact policy elites di...
This thesis is comprised of three papers, each making a distinctive theoretical and empirical contr...
Due to the politicization of much policymaking in the European Union (EU) and the growing competence...
This article develops and tests a theory of party group lobbying that demonstrates how the European ...
In their pursuit of political influence, interest groups face the choice to contact policy elites di...
Due to the politicization of much policymaking in the European Union (EU) and the growing competence...
We outline a conceptual framework that identifies and characterizes the contextual nature of interes...
What explains Members of European Parliament's (MEPs’) decisions to recognize some interest groups a...
Based on the assumption that lobbying practice is a product of its operational environment, the thes...
This paper contributes to discussions surrounding interest group representation in the European Parl...
Different types of interest groups use different lobbying strategies. This article presents an inves...
The recent empowerment of the European Parliament makes this a timely study of the impact of its int...
Concerns that democratic institutions are biased towards "special interests" and lobbyists are longs...