Chapter 5 - 3/5 - Interest groups Flashcards

1
Q

Pluralism?

A

When a society has many groups representing widely different interests.

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2
Q

How do interest groups differ from political parties?

A

They do not seek power, just to influence those that do have power.

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3
Q

What are sectional interest groups?

A

Groups that represent a section of society such as trade unions.

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4
Q

What are causal groups?

A

Groups that act in favour of ideas or ideology in the belief they benefit us all, rather than just a small sector or group of people.

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5
Q

What sectional groups represents American business?

A

US Chamber of Commerce

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6
Q

What sectional groups represents American farmers?

A

National Farmers’ Union

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7
Q

What are the four functions of interest groups?

A
  • Representation
  • Citizen participation
  • Agenda building
  • Programme monitoring
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8
Q

How do interest groups build an agenda?

A

They might bring together different parts of society (business, religion, government) and put pressure on them. They might also draft up bills which politicians can copy word-for-word to propose as law.

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9
Q

What are the two categories of interest groups?

A
  • Sectional groups
  • Causal groups
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10
Q

What are the 4 types of causal groups?

A
  1. Single-interest groups
  2. Ideological groups
  3. Policy groups
  4. Think-tanks
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11
Q

Give an example of a single-interest group.

A

National Rifle Association (NRA)

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12
Q

What is a single-interest group?

A

A group created in response to a specific issue.

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13
Q

What is a professional group?

A

A pressure group organised to promote the interests of a particular profession.

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14
Q

What is a policy group?

A

An ideological group that campaigns on a wider range of issues such as the environment.

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15
Q

What two things are important to the success of interest groups?

A
  • Money
  • Membership size
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16
Q

What tactics can interest groups use to achieve their aims?

A
  • Endorse a candidate
  • Lobbying
  • Organising media campaigns and marches
  • Legal challenges (NAACP funded Brown v Topeka)
17
Q

What does NAACP stand for?

A

National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People

18
Q

Give an example of a policy group.

A

Sierra Club

19
Q

What does the Sierra Club policy group promote?

A

Policies to protect and preserve the environment.

20
Q

Who founded the Sierra Club?

A

John Muir

21
Q

When was the Sierra Club founded?

A

1892

22
Q

What tactics does the Sierra Club use to promote its cause?

A
  • Endorsement of Democrat candidates
  • Social media campaigns
  • Making calls and delivering leaflets
23
Q

Who did the Sierra Club endorse in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections?

A

Clinton and Biden because the Democrats are more sympathetic to environmental issues than the big business supporters of the Republican Party.