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The Allocation of Resources by Interest Groups: Lobbying, Litigation and Administrative Regulation 

Authors: John M. de Figueiredo; Rui J. P. de Figueiredo Jr
DOI: 10.1080/1369525022000015603
Publication Frequency: 3 issues per year
Published in: journal Business and Politics, Volume 4, Issue 2 August 2002 , pages 161 - 181
Formats available: PDF (English)

The circumstances under which this title is published have changed:

Reason for change: Changed Publisher
Now published by: Bepress
Date of change: 2004

View Article: View Article (PDF) View Article (PDF)


Abstract

One of the central concerns about American policy making institutions is the degree to which political outcomes can be influenced by interested parties. While the literature on interest group strategies in particular institutions - legislative, administrative, and legal - is extensive, there is very little scholarship which examines how the interdependencies between institutions affects the strategies of groups. In this paper we examine in a formal theoretical model how the opportunity to litigate administrative rulemaking in the courts affects the lobbying strategies of competing interest groups at the rulemaking stage. Using a resource-based view of group activity, we develop a number of important insights about each stage that cannot be observed by examining each one in isolation. We demonstrate that lobbying effort responds to the ideology of the court, and the responsiveness of the court to resources. In particular, (1) as courts become more biased toward the status quo, interest group lobbying investments become smaller, and may be eliminated all together, (2) as interest groups become wealthier, they spend more on lobbying, and (3) as the responsiveness of courts to resources decreases, the effect it has on lobbying investments depends on the underlying ideology of the court.
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