ABSTRACT

This book investigates the political implications of country promotion through practices of ‘nation-branding’ by drawing on contemporary examples from the sports, urban development and higher education sector in Kazakhstan and Qatar.

Nation-branding has emerged as a central practice of international politics, where it is commonly understood as a vain, superficial selling technique with little political salience. Drawing on shared insights from practice theory and constructivist notions of nationalism, identity and power, this book challenges this reading and instead argues that nation-branding is neither neutral nor primarily economically motivated, but inherently politicised and tied to the legitimation of current political regimes. The starting point for the analysis is a range of everyday practices and sites long ignored by international relations scholars. In particular, the book traces how the political leadership in Kazakhstan and Qatar have used participation in the international sports circuit, spectacular urban development, and the construction of ‘world-class’ universities to first produce and then stabilize new ideas about their state.

Providing a new analytical perspective on nation-branding, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Middle Eastern and Central Asian studies, International Relations, and Cultural and Political Geography.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

part I|78 pages

A practice approach to nation-branding

chapter 2|16 pages

Analysing nation-branding in practice

chapter 3|35 pages

Situating nation-branding in practice

part II|110 pages

The promotion of sports, cities, and universities in Kazakhstan and Qatar

chapter 4|36 pages

Building the sports-brand

Team Astana and the 2022 FIFA World Cup

chapter 5|34 pages

Building the city-brand

Extravagant urban development in Astana and Doha

chapter 6|38 pages

Building the knowledge-brand

‘World-class’ education at Nazarbayev University and Education City

part III|24 pages

Nation-branding in practice

chapter 7|15 pages

Nation-branding as conservative politics

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Brand new world?