ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Torn Between Supranational Demands, National Politics and Societal Roots? Interest Organizations in a Multilayered Political System

Civil Society
Governance
Interest Groups
Frederik Heylen
Universiteit Antwerpen
Frederik Heylen
Universiteit Antwerpen
Jan Beyers
Universiteit Antwerpen
Bert Fraussen
Leiden University

Abstract

Some recent work on interest groups has studied how the evolution of political institutions, notably the emergence of multi-level governance, has transformed the organization of interests in European countries (e.g. Keating and Wilson 2014). Whereas much of this work has considered the implication of this evolution for interest group strategies and multi-level venue shopping (e.g. Beyers and Kerremans 2012), the repercussions for the organizational development of national interest group communities have received less attention. For instance, little is known on how this European experience with multi-level governance – the shifting of policy functions to multiple levels of governance – affects organizational centralization or the persistence and viability of local chapters (but see work on the US experience, for instance Skocpol 2003; Miller 2008). In this paper, we demonstrate that the prevalence of multilevel governance fosters a diverse organizational landscape with a mix of highly centralized groups and groups that strongly depend on local chapters. For this purpose we rely on a unique dataset that maps patterns of centralization and decentralization for all national interest groups in Belgium, an EU member state that can be characterized as an extreme example of multilevel governance.