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Interest Groups' Recruitment of Incumbent Parliamentarians to Their Boards

Huwyler, Oliver. (2022) Interest Groups' Recruitment of Incumbent Parliamentarians to Their Boards. Parliamentary Affairs, 75 (3). pp. 634-654.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/82518/

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Abstract

Interest groups recruit incumbent parliamentarians to their boards to influence policy, improve their resources, and signal political connectedness. To detect parliamentarians' characteristics that drive recruitment, this study analyses three decades of annual data (1985-2016) of 903 Swiss parliamentarians and their board seats. It compares 5,249 cases of parliamentarians' successful recruitment by 3,291 different organisations to counterfactual cases where no recruitment took place. The results show that interest groups recruit parliamentarians for both knowledge and networks (professions, other board seats) and influence (committee seats) in interest groups' policy areas. Moreover, recruited parliamentarians are more likely newcomers, ideologically proximate to interest groups, moderate, and from the same district as them.
Faculties and Departments:04 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > Departement Gesellschaftswissenschaften > Fachbereich Politikwissenschaft > Politikwissenschaft (Bailer)
UniBasel Contributors:Huwyler, Oliver
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISSN:0031-2290
e-ISSN:1460-2482
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
Identification Number:
edoc DOI:
Last Modified:12 Apr 2023 01:30
Deposited On:29 Nov 2022 16:34

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