Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities

<p><span>Studies on local interest groups have generated a considerable number of theories on urban power that have eventually become the basis of far-reaching approaches on democracy and collective action. Such literature has been especially concerned with discovering who governs the ci...

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Main Authors: Joaquim M. Molins, Iván Medina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Ciencia Política y de la Administración (AECPA) 2018-03-01
Series:Revista Española de Ciencia Política
Subjects:
Online Access:https://recyt.fecyt.es/index.php/recp/article/view/55968
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spelling doaj-ad5bf7cc54b846df921d1041964d2dad2020-11-25T02:39:17ZengAsociación Española de Ciencia Política y de la Administración (AECPA) Revista Española de Ciencia Política1575-65482173-98702018-03-010467710210.21308/recp.46.0438167Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish citiesJoaquim M. Molins0Iván Medina1Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaUniversidad de Valencia<p><span>Studies on local interest groups have generated a considerable number of theories on urban power that have eventually become the basis of far-reaching approaches on democracy and collective action. Such literature has been especially concerned with discovering who governs the city, paving the way for discussions on elitism, pluralism and urban regimes. Some approaches consider that the business elite dominates local politics, while other theories assert that interests other than business (neighbors, environmentalists, faith-based organizations, civic groups) have been gaining relevance and access to local government. The POLLEADER survey (2006) provided data on the influence of certain social groups as perceived by mayors in Spain. Data showed that the local business community was, at best, as influential and active as voluntary associations. With recent data from the POLLEADER II survey (2015), this article confirms a certain pluralistic model of local power and, it considers the number of inhabitants and the Mayors’ ideology as key factors to determine variation in the way interest groups’ influence is perceived.</span></p>https://recyt.fecyt.es/index.php/recp/article/view/55968poder, grupos de interés, empresarios, ciudades, alcaldes.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joaquim M. Molins
Iván Medina
spellingShingle Joaquim M. Molins
Iván Medina
Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
Revista Española de Ciencia Política
poder, grupos de interés, empresarios, ciudades, alcaldes.
author_facet Joaquim M. Molins
Iván Medina
author_sort Joaquim M. Molins
title Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
title_short Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
title_full Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
title_fullStr Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
title_full_unstemmed Local interest groups and the perception of power in Spanish cities
title_sort local interest groups and the perception of power in spanish cities
publisher Asociación Española de Ciencia Política y de la Administración (AECPA)
series Revista Española de Ciencia Política
issn 1575-6548
2173-9870
publishDate 2018-03-01
description <p><span>Studies on local interest groups have generated a considerable number of theories on urban power that have eventually become the basis of far-reaching approaches on democracy and collective action. Such literature has been especially concerned with discovering who governs the city, paving the way for discussions on elitism, pluralism and urban regimes. Some approaches consider that the business elite dominates local politics, while other theories assert that interests other than business (neighbors, environmentalists, faith-based organizations, civic groups) have been gaining relevance and access to local government. The POLLEADER survey (2006) provided data on the influence of certain social groups as perceived by mayors in Spain. Data showed that the local business community was, at best, as influential and active as voluntary associations. With recent data from the POLLEADER II survey (2015), this article confirms a certain pluralistic model of local power and, it considers the number of inhabitants and the Mayors’ ideology as key factors to determine variation in the way interest groups’ influence is perceived.</span></p>
topic poder, grupos de interés, empresarios, ciudades, alcaldes.
url https://recyt.fecyt.es/index.php/recp/article/view/55968
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