ABSTRACT

This book offers a critical re-thinking of the way in which traditional market logic - derived from mainstream economics and managerial marketing - has for decades commonly been applied in the theoretical understanding of democratic politics within influential quarters of political science and in later years also the relatively new but rapidly expanding field of political marketing. Such approaches are founded on the assumption that all markets are driven exclusively by exchange dynamics and this has in turn rendered the most basic workings of co-production and participation-oriented party-centred political systems theoretically invisible. The author starts by providing a thorough and wide-ranging critical assessment of the theoretical underpinnings of the contemporary political marketing literature and its market-based political science antecedents. Using a relationship marketing perspective the author goes on to offer a re-conceptualisation of these political spheres in terms of 'markets' which addresses the theoretical inadequacies of prior research. She closes by examining some of the most important practical implications that this alternative approach to party-centred politics may have for the marketing efforts of contemporary membership parties. This book is essential reading to all those interested in party-centred politics and political marketing, as well as democratic theorists and students of political theory in general.

part I|54 pages

Conceptual Whys and Contextual Wherefores

chapter 1|10 pages

Some Background and an Introduction

chapter 2|10 pages

Argument and Theoretical Ambitions

part II|42 pages

Understanding Markets and Marketing – Two Important Frameworks

chapter 4|15 pages

Marketing – The Managerial Perspective

chapter 5|18 pages

Marketing – The Relational Perspective

chapter 6|6 pages

A Comparison of the Two

part III|99 pages

Political Marketing – Theorising Politics as ‘Markets’