Together forever? Explaining exclusivity in party-firm relations

Author: Balicki R., Bielasiak J., Brusis M., Burris V., Clawson D., Coen D., Della Porta D., Domañski H., DrŒ±g Z., Elgie R., Elgie R., Eyal G., Gerring J., Gerring J., Gerring J., Grant W., Grant W., Greenwood J., Heinz J., Hellman J. S., Hellman J. S., Hopkin J., Jasiecki K., Kadushin C., Kerlin J., Kloc K., Kolankiewicz G., Lijphart A., Lindblom C., Martin C.-J., McLean P. D., McMenamin I., McMenamin I., McMenamin I., Mills C. W., Montinola G., Offe C., Padgett J. F., Persson T., Rose-Ackerman S., Sadowski D., Salisbury R., Sanford G., Sartori G., Schmitter P. C., Scott J., Sejm Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej, Siaroff A., Staniszkis J., Stark D., Suleiman E. N., Szawiel T., Thurmaier K., Useem M., Wasilewski J., Wasilewski J., Wilson G. K., Wo≈Çek A.
Publisher: Wiley

ABOUT BOOK

Parties and firms are the key actors of representative democracy and capitalism respectively and the dynamic of attachment between them is a central feature of any political economy. This is the first article to systematically analyse the exclusivity of party-firm relations. We consider exclusivity at a point in time and exclusivity over time. Does a firm have a relationship with only one party at a given point in time, or is it close to more than one party? Does a firm maintain a relationship with only one party over time, or does it switch between parties? Most important, how do patterns of exclusivity impact on a firm’s ability to lobby successfully? We propose a general theory, which explains patterns of party-firm relations by reference to the division of institutions and the type of party competition in a political system. A preliminary test of our theory with Polish survey data confirms our predictions, establishing a promising hypothesis for future research

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