studying interest groups: methodological challenges and tools

Research on interest groups has evolved from a focus on small- N studies to larger- N studies in the past 15 years. While both European and American research has become more sophisticated and aware of methodological aspects, there is yet no specialized literature on methods regarding how to study in...

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Veröffentlicht in:European political science 2017-09, Vol.16 (3), p.291-305
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description Research on interest groups has evolved from a focus on small- N studies to larger- N studies in the past 15 years. While both European and American research has become more sophisticated and aware of methodological aspects, there is yet no specialized literature on methods regarding how to study interest groups. Only few studies discuss the methodological implications of interest group studies, as well as the transferability of methods employed in other areas of political science to this research area. The contributions in this symposium focus on major problems and topics in interest group research and elaborate methods to deal with them: (1) the identification of the relevant interest group population, (2) the analysis of interest group strategies such as access, (3) the identification of interest groups positions and frames, and (4) the measurement of interest group success and influence. The introduction outlines these research problems and describes how the contributions to this symposium address them. The aim of the symposium is to increase awareness of the intricacies of these research problems, outline suitable practices to handle them, and stimulate debate on these methodological aspects.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Comparative Politics
Group research
Identification
Interest groups
Measurement
Political Science
Political Science and International Relations
Political Science and International Studies
Political Theory
Research methodology
Studies
Symposium
Transferability
title studying interest groups: methodological challenges and tools
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