POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Magruder’s American Government
Advertisements

Interest Groups Magruder Chapter Nine.
 Interest group  An organization of people with shared policy goals entering the policy process at several points to try to achieve those goals  Interest.
Interest Groups Standard Describe the means that citizens use to participate in the political process (e.g., voting, campaigning, lobbying, filing.
Interest Groups.
The Nature of Interest Groups
Where our country is going PUBLIC POLICY. Public policy What is public policy? The things our country focuses on. These decisions are made by the government.
Bellwork: Day 5 Lets say you wanted to change the food choices here at ERHS. What strategy would be more effective: visiting the principal individually,
The Nature of Interest Groups What role do interest groups have in influencing public policy? How can we compare and contrast political parties.
1 The Nature of Interest Groups What role do interest groups have in influencing public policy? How can we compare and contrast political parties and interest.
Political and Economic Systems
Unit 3 Influencing Government. 1.Influencing Government through our Political Parties  Contact your MP  Run for MP  Volunteer for a political party.
Unit G: Interest Groups Chapter 9 / Section 2 Types of Interest Groups
1. 2 The Nature of Interest Groups What role do interest groups have in influencing public policy? How can we compare and contrast political parties and.
© 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. C H A P T E R 9 Interest Groups.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 9 Interest Groups.
Interest groups and policy- making. An initial view Interest groups, along with parties, interpose themselves between the state and civil society Interest.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 9 Interest Groups.
Interest Groups Chapter 12. Interest Groups The American System is one where groups organize around every conceivable issue Single Issue Politics - The.
What is happening in the picture? What do you think the people protesting are trying to do?
SECTION1 Unit 3, Section 6 Interest Groups. SECTION2 I. The Role of Interest Groups A. Interest groups are private organizations whose members share certain.
Presentation Pro Mr. Jason Cargile Mission Hills High School Mr. Jason Cargile Mission Hills High School.
Interest Groups Linkage Institutions. Interest Groups  Organized group of individuals seeking to influence the government and policies *they operate.
College of Education School of Continuing and Distance Education 2014/2015 – 2016/2017 POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Sessions 7 – The Executive and Judiciary.
College of Education School of Continuing and Distance Education 2014/2015 – 2016/2017 POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Sessions 7&8 : Bureaucracy Lecturer:
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 7-1 Part Three Theories and Institutions: Trade and Investment International Business.
Monitoring and Influencing Government
Introduction to Political Science (IRE 101) Week 3 Political Theories
Lobbying- the effort of an interest group to influence government decisions
Interest Groups and Lobbyists
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
Magruder’s American Government
Monitoring and Influencing Government
Interest Articulation
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
Magruder’s American Government
POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
Education International CEE Round Table 2010
C H A P T E R 9 Interest Groups (aka factions!)
Chapter 8: Business Organizations Section 3
What is happening in the picture?
Monitoring and Influencing Government
C H A P T E R 9 Interest Groups (aka factions!)
Comparing Political Systems
Interest Groups.
Types How Interest Groups Work
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Chapter 9 Sections 1 and 2 Interest Groups
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Comparing Political Systems
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Interest Groups Linkage Institutions.
Interest Groups Linkage Institutions.
Magruder’s American Government
Interest Groups A private organization that tries to persuade public officials to respond to the shared attitudes of its members Interest groups attempt.
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Concepts of Engineering
Monitoring and Influencing Government
Presentation transcript:

POLI 112 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Session 10: Pressure Groups Lecturer: Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO, Department of Political Science

Pressure Groups Defined A pressure group is an organized group of individuals who at any point in time may seek to influence the policies of government in their own chosen direction but unlike Political Parties, they are never themselves prepares to directly run the affairs of the government of their country. Examples of pressure groups in Ghana include the Ghana Bar Association, Ghana Medical Association, University Teachers Association, National Union of Ghana Students, etc. These are also called Interest Groups because they exist and operate to promote the interest of their members Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO, Dept of Political Science, UG

Theories of Origin of Pressure Groups It is for example practiced in Britain while the Theories of Origin of Pressure Groups The Group Theory – This basically states that in general, all politics is a group conflict and political decisions are arrived at as a result of the conflict between organized pressure groups. Group theory like other Political Science theories raises very complex issues and is presented in a way which is extremely difficult to grasp. But basically, they try to answer the question as to how pressure groups originated. Social Forces or Social Equilibrium Theory. This is one of the earliest versions of the Group Theory, propounded by David Truman. The theory states that social change of the kind that happens when a society moves from an agricultural to the industrial level of development disturbs in a profound way the normal equilibrium or balance of society. People therefore organize themselves into a form of association to defend and protect their values and goals in order to restore a certain degree of social balance Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG .

Theories of Origin of Pressure Groups (Cont) Incentive Theory – Mancur Olson reasoned that social change by itself would not lead people to form pressure groups. People form pressure groups only if there is some incentive to motivate the people to join. The incentive to join a group exists when two conditions are fulfilled. First, Economic benefits to be gained by members. Second, members join because of social pressure Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Functions of Pressure Groups Putting together the various interest of its members – Interest aggregation Making know the interest and challenges confronting its members with the view to seeking redress and attention of policy makers – Interest articulation Offering expertise view and knowledge on what can be done to tackle national crisis when needed Keeping governments on their toes and making them accountable and responsive to the needs of the citizenry Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

The Problems Pressure Groups Create Through needless strikes and demonstrations, they can paralyze the economy of the country and reduce productivity Their actions can also make the country ungovernable They are sometimes selfish as they work to promote the interest of only those who belong to them Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

The Problems Pressure Groups Create (cont) Moreover, pressure groups exercise non-legitimate powers in that their leaders unlike politicians are not publicly accountable. They seek to influence leaders who have been elected but they themselves may be representing a small minute section of the entire populace  Their activities also promote elitism as its members are drawn from a certain class of society Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Some Images of Activities of Pressure Groups Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Image of Pressure Group Activism . Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Image of Pressure Group Activism on Radio Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Tools Used to Champion The Interest of Pressure Groups Strikes, Demonstrations, petitions, protests, boycotts, lobbying Threats Assassinations   Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Reading List Refer to Unit 5, pp. 87 to 100 of Poli 112 (Political Institutions) Modules Gyampo, R.E.V. The state of Political Institutions in Ghana, (Saarbrucken, Germany: Lambert Academic Publishing Inc. 2012) pp. 147-158 Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG

Concluding Remark THANK YOU R.E.V GYAMPO Dr. R.E.V. GYAMPO Dept of Political Science, UG