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13.2: Interest Groups and Lobbying - Classroom Activity

  • Page ID
    231700
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    The Battle of Interest Groups

    1. Warm-Up Discussion

    Compare typical features of established interest groups (AARP, NRA, labor unions) against the social movement characteristics of Black Lives Matter. How does BLM disrupt the conventional understanding of how interest groups operate?

    2. Group Analysis & Scenario Building blm.jpeg

    Form groups of 3 to 4 members and choose social issues such as climate justice, housing rights, immigrant protection, or reproductive rights for your assignment. Each group needs to create an interest group and select one of these models:

    Model A: Traditional Interest Group

    - Build a formal leadership structure

    - Identify legislative targets and lobbying goals

    - Plan media or fundraising strategies

    Model B: Anarchist-Inspired Movement Group

    - Emphasize horizontal organizing and direct action

    - Focus on community-based support and mutual aid

    - Reject institutional engagement in favor of alternative structures

    3. Presentations

    Each group presents to the class their organizing models, goals, and challenges.

    4. Debrief & Discussion

    - Which organizing model is better suited to long-term change? Which one to immediate results?

    - What risks do decentralized groups face? What power do they gain?

    - Should all interest groups seek institutional acceptance? Why or why not?

    Evaluation Rubric

    Criteria Exemplary (A) Satisfactory (B–C)
    Understanding of Models Clearly distinguishes organizing styles Basic distinction with minor confusion
    Application to Issue Applies theory creatively and appropriately Applies theory but lacks depth
    Critical Reflection Raises thoughtful ethical or strategic insights Reflects on concepts without critique


    13.2: Interest Groups and Lobbying - Classroom Activity is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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