Interest Group Strategic Responses to Democratic Backsliding

被引:0
作者
Fink-Hafner, Danica [1 ]
Bauman, Sara [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ljubljana, Fac Social Sci, Ljubljana, Slovenia
来源
POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE | 2023年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
Covid-19; democratic backsliding; environment; interest group strategies; NGOs; Slovenia; social partnership; trade unions; ACCESS; RISE;
D O I
10.17645/pag.v11i1.5863
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
In this article, we offer insights into the plurality of interest groups' strategic responses to the socially, politically, and economically transformative phenomenon of democratic backsliding. For the purpose of the article, the term "ideational plurality" has been coined to refer to a plurality of interest groups' ideas leading their activities in general and their choice of strategies concerning the government in particular (attitudinal and behavioural aspects). Two policy fields and two types of interest groups engaged in an institutionalised social partnership-advocacy NGOs (operating in the environmental policy field) and economic groups (trade unions)-are studied comparatively in Slovenia using a mixed-methods approach. The key findings are that strategic responses to democratic backsliding vary between environmental NGOs and trade unions, as do their ideational plurality, and that environmental NGOs' ideational plurality damages their potential to struggle against democratic backsliding. In contrast, trade unions' ideational homogeneity enables them to jointly struggle against governmental destruction of one significant segment of democratic order (institutions of social partnership) without demanding that the government step down for misusing the Covid-19 pandemic to establish a system of governance that resonates with Viktor Orban's ideas of illiberal democracy.
引用
收藏
页码:39 / 49
页数:11
相关论文
共 55 条
[31]   Changes in interest group access in times of crisis: no pain, no (lobby) gain [J].
Junk, Wiebke Marie ;
Crepaz, Michele ;
Hanegraaff, Marcel ;
Berkhout, Joost ;
Aizenberg, Ellis .
JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY, 2022, 29 (09) :1374-1394
[32]  
Kingdon JW, 1984, Agendas, Alternatives, and public policies
[33]   Symbolic Thickening of Public Culture and the Rise of Right-Wing Populism in Poland [J].
Kotwas, Marta ;
Kubik, Jan .
EAST EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETIES, 2019, 33 (02) :435-471
[34]  
Krasovec A, 2017, TEOR PRAKSA, V54, P30
[35]   Interest group strategies and policy involvement: Does the context matter? Evidence from Southern Europe [J].
Lisi, Marco ;
Loureiro, Joao .
INTEREST GROUPS & ADVOCACY, 2022, 11 (01) :109-135
[36]   State of the world 2019: autocratization surges - resistance grows [J].
Maerz, Seraphine F. ;
Luhrmann, Anna ;
Hellmeier, Sebastian ;
Grahn, Sandra ;
Lindberg, Staffan I. .
DEMOCRATIZATION, 2020, 27 (06) :909-927
[37]  
Maloney W., 1994, Journal of Public Policy, V14, P17, DOI DOI 10.1017/S0143814X00001239
[38]  
Martin JozsefPeter., 2017, Lobbying in Europe, P177, DOI [10.1057/978-1-137-55256-3_16, DOI 10.1057/978-1-137-55256-3_16]
[39]  
Novak M., 2019, SUDOSTEUROPA MITTEIL, V2019, P142
[40]   Battles over Biofuels in Europe: NGOs and the Politics of Markets [J].
Pilgrim, Sarah ;
Harvey, Mark .
SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ONLINE, 2010, 15 (03) :45-60