Nature and Prospects of Political Interest Groups
Alfred De Grazia
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Alfred De Grazia: PROD (Political Research: Organization and Design)
The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1958, vol. 319, issue 1, 113-122
Abstract:
All politiking is done by "interested" persons and the term "interest group" involves a truism, not a pathologi cal condition. Interest groups are essential political aggre gates whose form, functions, and power depend upon stated socio-political conditions. Interest groups have intrapersonal and interpersonal dimensions. Group leaders usually possess the intensive perspectives of their group, whereas the rank and file usually have significantly varied and split involvements in their groups. The "individual" interest can be conceived in group theory terms, so can the "national interest." A strong antigroup ideology is found in nineteenth-century democratic and socialist movements, which tended to fluctuate between semi-anarchism and executive dictatorship. Group theory pic tures the developing society more accurately in many ways than such other theories, while simultaneously interest groups are still treated as pests or threats to democracy. Political phi losophy should seek to reconcile fact and value in this situation and has a variety of theories from the past to utilize. Interest groups, broadly regarded as instruments of pluralism and lo calism, are an especially American practical alternative to the program of communist centralism in ideology and government.
Date: 1958
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:anname:v:319:y:1958:i:1:p:113-122
DOI: 10.1177/000271625831900113
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