Nonprofit organisations influence public policy through a constellation of interrelated mechanisms that extend far beyond direct lobbying. This article identifies and analyses five primary mechanisms—knowledge production, participation in epistemic communities, framing and narrative construction, insider–outsider tactics, and strategic litigation—and explores how they interact within diverse political contexts. Nonprofits act as knowledge brokers, combining technical expertise with moral framing to enhance legitimacy, yet risk marginalising grassroots voices. Framing strategies recontextualise social issues such as domestic violence or poverty into matters of public concern and legal responsibility. Insider–outsider approaches alternate between cooperation and confrontation, while strategic litigation embeds advocacy outcomes within institutional frameworks. The analysis positions nonprofit influence as a dynamic, relational process shaped by legitimacy, opportunity structures, and representation. For practitioners, the findings highlight how integrating evidence, framing, networks, and legal tools can generate sustainable policy impact.
Anna Neya Kazanskaia (Wed,) studied this question.