We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
The marketing of political parties
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
30 November 2006

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Political parties and party platforms, Elections and referenda / suffrage
1. Introduction - Darren Lilleker, Nigel Jackson & Richard Scullion
2. ‘Are you thinking what we’re thinking?’, or ‘Are we thinking what you’re thinking?’: An exploratory analysis of the market-orientation of the UK parties - Robert P. Ormrod and Stefan C. M. Henneberg
3. The 2005 UK general election and the emergence of the ‘negative brand’ - Jenny Lloyd
4. Political marketing and the 2005 election: what’s ideology got to do with it? - Heather Savigny
5. A marketing analysis of the 2005 British general election advertising campaigns - Janine Dermody and Stuart Hanmer-Lloyd
6. The autistic campaign: the parties, the media and the voters - Ivor Gaber
7. Banking Online: the use of the Internet by political parties to build relationships with voters - Nigel A. Jackson
8. Investigating electoral choice through a 'consumer as choice maker' lens - Richard Scullion
9. Local political marketing: political marketing as public service - Darren G. Lilleker
10. View from the armchair: Why young people took no interest and no notice of the campaigns - Dianne Dean
11. Conclusion: was 2005 the year political marketing came of age? - Darren G. Lilleker, Nigel Jackson & Richard Scullion