Regulating lobbyists: A comparative analysis of the United States, Canada, Germany and the European Union

Raj Chari, Gary Murphy, John Hogan

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Lobbying is central to the democratic process. Yet, only four political systems have lobbying regulations: the United States, Canada, Germany and the EU (most particularly, the European Parliament). Despite the many works offering individual country analysis of lobbying legislation, a twofold void exists in the literature. Firstly, no study has offered a comparative analysis classifying the laws in these four political systems, which would improve understanding of the different regulatory environments. Secondly, few studies have analysed the views of key agents—politicians, lobbyists and regulators—and how these compare and contrast across regulatory environments.

    We firstly utilise an index measuring how strong the regulations are in each of the systems, and develop a classification scheme for the different ‘ideal’ types of regulatory environment. Secondly, we measure the opinions of political actors, interest groups and regulators in all four systems (through questionnaires and elite interviews) and see what correlations, if any, exist between the different ideal types of system and their opinions. The conclusion highlights our findings, and the lessons that can be used by policy-makers in systems without lobbying legislation.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)422-438
    Number of pages17
    JournalPolitical Quarterly
    Volume78
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jul 2007

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