Consumer politics : protecting public interests on Capitol Hill
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Consumer politics : protecting public interests on Capitol Hill
(Contributions in political science, no. 343)
Greenwood Press, 1994
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [159]-177) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume analyses the interaction of business lobbyists, consumer critics, and government officials for the first time in 20 years. It offers important new insights and revisionist views about the impact of consumer issue networks in the making of public policy in Congress during the 1980s and 1990s. It shows how consumer groups lobby Congressional committees and their leaders and staffers to reform legislation in areas of critical concern.
This text for undergraduate and graduate courses in American politics, business and government, lobbying and interest group behavior, and political sociology covers the expanding range and activities of consumer lobbyists in recent years and gives a short history of their role in Congressional decisionmaking from the Progressive and New Deal eras to the present. The study details their activities in terms of civic outcomes (campaign finance, intervenor funding, freedom of information); consumer protection (impure food, unsafe drugs, autos, toys, and household appliances); economic regulation and deregulation (airlines, financing services, trucking, and telecommunications); and highly politicized pocketbook issues (health care, tax, energy, income, and trade policies). Journalists, activists, and students of politics, business administration, and sociology will find the conclusions about consumers, businesses, and Congressional decisionmaking and the arguments for government and citizen activism arresting.
Table of Contents
Preface Introduction Interests, Activists, and Institutions Consumers and the Public Interest Business and the American State Congress and Consumer Politics Consumer Advocacy on Capitol Hill Consumer Policy in a De-Regulatory Era Civic Outcomes Classic Consumer Protection Economic Regulation High Politics Conclusion References Index
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