In 2010, the incoming Coalition government announced that it would publish details of meetings between ministers and outside interests. We have collated and coded these data and, in this article, describe patterns of access between 2010 and 2015. In some respects, access is notably fragmented. No single organisation attends more than 2.5% of the 6292 meetings held by ministers. On the contrary, business, collectively, attends fully 45% of all meetings: more than twice the share of any other category of organisation. We also find evidence of distinctive policy communities characterised by high levels of access between particular interests and ministers within specific departments
Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coal...
Despite the impressive amount of empirical research on lobbying, a fundamental question remains over...
The role of legislatures in scrutinising executive patronage has received scant attention in the con...
In 2010, the incoming Coalition government announced that it would publish details of meetings betwe...
In 2010, the incoming Coalition government announced that it would publish details of meetings betwe...
In 2002, an amendment to UK parliamentary regulations removed restrictions on the participation of M...
The degree to which interest groups gain access to policymakers has often been explained by focusing...
After the article was submitted for review, we continued improving the data. We performed a second a...
The delegation of public tasks to arm’s-length bodies remains a central feature of contemporary refo...
MPs have this week been debating the government’s controversial Lobbying Bill, which has now conclud...
The EU offers a variety of access points through which interest groups can attempt to influence poli...
This thesis examines a previously unstudied site of interaction: the constituency office. At the con...
Lobbying in politics is nothing new, but the recent resignation of Liam Fox from his ministerial pos...
What organized interests are mobilized in influencing public policy? What does the map of organised ...
AbstractThe government of the UK is reputed to be among the world’s most transparent governments. Ye...
Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coal...
Despite the impressive amount of empirical research on lobbying, a fundamental question remains over...
The role of legislatures in scrutinising executive patronage has received scant attention in the con...
In 2010, the incoming Coalition government announced that it would publish details of meetings betwe...
In 2010, the incoming Coalition government announced that it would publish details of meetings betwe...
In 2002, an amendment to UK parliamentary regulations removed restrictions on the participation of M...
The degree to which interest groups gain access to policymakers has often been explained by focusing...
After the article was submitted for review, we continued improving the data. We performed a second a...
The delegation of public tasks to arm’s-length bodies remains a central feature of contemporary refo...
MPs have this week been debating the government’s controversial Lobbying Bill, which has now conclud...
The EU offers a variety of access points through which interest groups can attempt to influence poli...
This thesis examines a previously unstudied site of interaction: the constituency office. At the con...
Lobbying in politics is nothing new, but the recent resignation of Liam Fox from his ministerial pos...
What organized interests are mobilized in influencing public policy? What does the map of organised ...
AbstractThe government of the UK is reputed to be among the world’s most transparent governments. Ye...
Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coal...
Despite the impressive amount of empirical research on lobbying, a fundamental question remains over...
The role of legislatures in scrutinising executive patronage has received scant attention in the con...