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Publius: The Journal of Federalism 1998 28(2):61-79;
© 1998 by CSF Associates Inc.
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The Density of State Interest-Communities: Do Regional Variables Matter?

Virginia Gray and David Lowery
University of Minnesota
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill

To better understand state interest-group politics, this study compares two approaches to understanding the density of their interest communities. The first approach—Gray and Lowery's energy, stability, area model of density—emphasizes a small set of political and economic variables operative within each state in accounting for density. The second, of which there are several examples, emphasizes a regional level of analysis. The two approaches are evaluated as both independent and complementary accounts of state interest-community density using 1990 state lobby-registration data. Although some evidence of modest underspecification in the Gray and Lowery model is found, regional or spatially based variables only have a small impact on the density of state interest-communities.


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