Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 STUDYING LOBBYISTS AND LOBBYING
- 2 LOBBYING AND LOBBYISTS IN THE UNITED STATES: A PRIMER
- 3 PUBLIC POLICY LOBBYING, PART ONE
- 4 PUBLIC POLICY LOBBYING, PART TWO
- 5 LAND USE LOBBYING
- 6 PROCUREMENT LOBBYING
- 7 RECAP AND FINAL THOUGHTS
- Appendix A The Classification System: Public Policy, Land Use, and Procurement Lobbying
- Appendix B Methodological Notes
- Notes
- Index
Appendix B - Methodological Notes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 STUDYING LOBBYISTS AND LOBBYING
- 2 LOBBYING AND LOBBYISTS IN THE UNITED STATES: A PRIMER
- 3 PUBLIC POLICY LOBBYING, PART ONE
- 4 PUBLIC POLICY LOBBYING, PART TWO
- 5 LAND USE LOBBYING
- 6 PROCUREMENT LOBBYING
- 7 RECAP AND FINAL THOUGHTS
- Appendix A The Classification System: Public Policy, Land Use, and Procurement Lobbying
- Appendix B Methodological Notes
- Notes
- Index
Summary
In this brief methodological appendix I describe: (1) my data-gathering approach and (2) the way I selected my sample of respondents.
THE APPROACH: ELITE INTERVIEWING
Of the many ways to study lobbyists and lobbying, I employed elite interviewing as my principal method of inquiry. In this section, I discuss the pros and cons of elite interviewing and how I attempted to minimize problems associated with this method.
The Basic Approach
Elite interviewing is defined as “a specialized case of interviewing that focuses on a particular type of interviewee. Elite individuals are considered to be the influential, the prominent, and the well-informed people in an organization or community and are selected for interviews on the basis of their expertise in areas relevant to the research.”
I chose elite interviewing primarily because of the enormous amounts of data it produces. As mentioned in Chapter 1, ultimately I conducted a total of 34 interviews, 33 over the telephone, and 1 in person. I tape-recorded (with respondents' permission) and later transcribed 32 of the 33 telephone interviews. I transcribed the remaining 1 telephone interview and 1 in-person lobbyist interview on the spot. In all, my interviews produced 248 single-spaced pages (more than 120,000 words) of interview transcripts.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Total LobbyingWhat Lobbyists Want (and How They Try to Get It), pp. 225 - 232Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006