Interest Groups and the European Union No 7, 2002/3 - 180 pagesPages 5 to 17Studying Interest Groups in EuropeBy Emiliano Grossman, Sabine SauruggerPages 19 to 42The Law as a Register of the Europeanization of an Interest GroupBy Hélène MichelPages 43 to 65The Europeanization of Structures Representing Interests: The Case of Banking AssociationsBy Emiliano GrossmanPages 66 to 96French Professional Organizations: A Europeanized Intermediation of Interests?By Christine QuittkatPages 96 to 115Strategies of Business Interest Associations in the Netherlands and Germany: European Priorities or Domestic Concerns?By Arnold WiltsPages 116 to 137When Size MattersBy David Coen, Charles DannreutherPages 138 to 158The Nature and Context of Public Interest Coalitions in the European UnionBy Ruth WebsterVariaPages 159 to 177When Europe Knocks on the Regions’ DoorsBy Romain PasquierOngoing ResearchPages 178 to 182A Syncretic Approach to Analytical Perspectives on European IntegrationBy Sébastien GuignerPages 183 to 186Was the Convergence of Regional Language Teaching Systems in Eastern Europe Coordinated by the European Union?By Christophe ScheidhauerPages 187 to 193Critical Reading