The Two‐Way Street: Government Shaping of Community‐Based Advocacy
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Australian Journal of Public Administration
- Vol. 55 (4) , 82-99
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8500.1996.tb02563.x
Abstract
The interaction between government and community‐based advocacy organisations is becoming complex and highly structured. While some analysts seek to explain such interplay within neo‐Marxist or public choice frameworks, we argue the relationship is best understood as a two‐way street, full of tensions but neither a conspiracy against the public interest nor part of a larger design to deradicalise social movements. Drawing on a wide range of Australian examples, but focusing in particular on peak women's and ethnic communities' organisations, we explore how social movements have been able to exert independent influence on the policy agenda.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- ‘The women's lobby’: Networks, coalition building and the women of middle AustraliaAustralian Journal of Political Science, 1994
- Building Coalitions: The Australian Labor Party and the 1993 General ElectionAustralian Journal of Political Science, 1994
- Politics as if Women MatteredPublished by University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) ,1993
- Setting the Agenda in Australian Politics: Towards Regime Change through Partial Realignment?The Australian Quarterly, 1989
- Protest as a Political ResourceAmerican Political Science Review, 1968