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Book

Global Political Marketing

Book

Global Political Marketing

DOI link for Global Political Marketing

Global Political Marketing book

Global Political Marketing

DOI link for Global Political Marketing

Global Political Marketing book

Edited ByJennifer Lees-Marshment, Chris Rudd, Jesper Stromback
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2009
eBook Published 12 October 2009
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203869338
Pages 320
eBook ISBN 9780203869338
Subjects Politics & International Relations
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Lees-Marshment, J., Rudd, C., & Stromback, J. (Eds.). (2009). Global Political Marketing (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203869338

ABSTRACT

There is increasing awareness of growing similarities in political marketing practices around the world. Global political marketing is a comprehensive analysis of why, how and with what affect parties use political marketing in a range of political systems - presidential, parliamentary, two and multi-party, and established and emerging democracies.

Written by a team of 25 international expert authors, the volume explores the impact of systemic features such as the party and electoral system, analysing how parties use marketing through 14 detailed country studies. The book explores the notion that political marketing is used by parties to both sell and design political products, is by no means confined to the opposition, and that many opinions besides those of the voters are considered in product design, including ideological anchors, expert opinion and party members’ input.

The authors also explore how other factors impact on political marketing effectiveness, such as the ability of governments to communicate delivery, stay in touch, the role of the media and party unity and culture. Finally the work discusses the democratic implications of market-oriented parties, highlighting the need for debate about the relationship between citizens and governments and the prospects for democracy in the 21st century.

Including a practitioner perspective as well as rigorous academic analysis, this collection provides the first global comprehensive overview of how political parties market themselves, it will be of great interest to all scholars of political marketing, parties and elections and comparative politics.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|15 pages

Global political marketing

ByJENNIFER LEES-MARSHMENT

chapter 2|18 pages

A framework for comparing political market-orientation

ByJESPER STRÖMBÄCK

chapter 3|18 pages

Political marketing in Germany

ByMICHAELA MAIER, JENS TENSCHER, KIRSTEN SCHÜLLER

chapter 4|13 pages

Political market-orientation in a multi-party system: The Swedish case

ByJESPER STRÖMBÄCK

chapter 5|17 pages

New Zealand political marketing: Marketing communication rather than the product?

ByJENNIFER LEES-MARSHMENT

chapter 6|14 pages

Australian political marketing: Substance backed by style

ByANDREW HUGHES, STEPHEN DANN

chapter 7|17 pages

Political marketing in the United States: From market- towards sales-orientation?

ByJONATHAN KNUCKEY

chapter 8|15 pages

UK political marketing: A question of leadership?

ByJENNIFER LEES-MARSHMENT AND ROBIN T. PETTITT

chapter 9|15 pages

The level of market-orientation of political parties in Greece

ByIORDANIS KOTZAIVAZOGLOU, YORGOS ZOTOS

chapter 10|14 pages

Political salesmen in Hungary

ByBALÁZS KISS, ZSUZSANNA MIHÁLYFFY

chapter 11|18 pages

The Czech case: A marketing-oriented party on the rise?

ByANNA MATUSˇKOVÁ, OTTO EIBL AND ALEXANDER BRAUN

chapter 12|14 pages

Testing the market-oriented model of political parties in a non-Western context: The case of Taiwan

ByDAFYDD J. FELL, ISABELLE CHENG

chapter 13|13 pages

Political marketing in Ghana

ByKOBBY MENSAH

chapter 14|16 pages

Political marketing in a weak democracy: the Peruvian case

ByPEDRO PATRÓN GALINDO

chapter 15|16 pages

Political marketing techniques in Russia

ByDEREK S. HUTCHESON

chapter 16|15 pages

Political market-orientation in Japan

ByMASAHIKO ASANO, BRYCE WAKEFIELD

chapter 17|14 pages

Implementing and interpreting market-orientation in practice: lessons from the UK

ByROGER MORTIMORE, MARK GILL

chapter 18|15 pages

Political marketing, party behaviour and political science

ByMICK TEMPLE

chapter 19|20 pages

Global political marketing: Analysis and conclusions

ByJENNIFER LEES-MARSHMENT, CHRIS RUDD AND JESPER STRÖMBÄCK
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