A Swedish culture of advocacy? Civil society organisations' strategies for political influence

This article sets out to identify a culture of advocacy that has come to characterise Swedish civil society, formed around a long-standing tradition of close and cordial relations between civil society organisations, popular movements, and state and government officials. We argue that Swedish civil...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inSociologisk forskning Vol. 55; no. 2/3; pp. 341 - 364
Main Authors ARVIDSON, MALIN, JOHANSSON, HÅKAN, MEEUWISSE, ANNA, SCARAMUZZINO, ROBERTO
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Lund Sveriges Sociologförbund / Swedish Sociological Association 01.01.2018
Lunds Universitet
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This article sets out to identify a culture of advocacy that has come to characterise Swedish civil society, formed around a long-standing tradition of close and cordial relations between civil society organisations, popular movements, and state and government officials. We argue that Swedish civil society organisations (CSOs) have been allowed to voice critique against public actors and policies and are expected to do so. Based on a large survey of Swedish CSOs, this study contributes unique data on what type of advocacy strategies CSOs practise, and the range of advocacy strategies that organisations employ. The analysis also explores norm-breaking behaviour, such as holding back criticism of public authorities. The results reveal a complex picture of a culture of advocacy: we find patterns of intense political activity among organisations that admit they hold back in their criticism of public authorities and the use of a wide range of advocacy strategies. The article contributes to and challenges established advocacy research and analyses established patterns of organisations' advocacy activities with the symbolic acts of breaking norms, as an analytical approach for the study of advocacy strategies in general and advocacy culture in particular.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
ISSN:0038-0342
2002-066X
2002-066X
DOI:10.37062/sf.55.18196