Archive for July 2024

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[Commlist] Call for book chapter contributions: (digital) political marketing in Africa

Fri Jul 26 09:48:26 GMT 2024




*CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTERS*

**

*(DIGITAL)**POLITICAL MARKETING IN AFRICA: MAPPING PRACTICES AND TRAJECTORIES.*

*Editors*

*Albert Chibuwe*(chibuwea /at/ staff.msu.ac.zw) <mailto:(chibuwea /at/ staff.msu.ac.zw)>

Department of Media Communication, Film and Theatre Arts, Midlands State University, Zimbabwe

*Allen Munoriyarwa*(amunoriyarwa /at/ wsu.ac.za) <mailto:(amunoriyarwa /at/ wsu.ac.za)>

Department of Marketing, Public Relations and Communication, Walter Sisulu University, South Africa and Department of Communication and Media, University of Johannesburg, South Africa. **

There is a general perception that politics necessitates political communication. In other words, regardless of whether a political system is a democracy or a dictatorship, it requires political communication. As Menon (2008) notes, even dictatorships utilise it to spruce up their images. Following on from the foregoing argument, it is arguable that the use of political communication implies the presence of a method of political communication. However, this fact notwithstanding, there is, in Africa, scant literature that interrogates the method of political communication which is political marketing. As scholars note, political marketing is the general method of political communication (see Maarek 1995:28; Menon 2008).It involves the expansion of marketing concepts into politics in ways that can enable people to make sense of modern democratic practices (Henneberg 2004). Despite its well-advanced study in the West, there is not much work that has been done in Africa. In other words, political marketing in Africa is under-researched and under-theorised. Available literature tends to be restricted to Southern Africa and West Africa and seems to be dominantly from former British colonies. Emerging scholarship is mainly restricted to four countries namely Zimbabwe (Chibuwe 2013), South Africa (Kayode, Calitz and Cullen 2015, Dabula 2017), Ghana (Mensah (ed) 2017), and Nigeria (Osuagwu 2008; Gbadeyan 2011).

The foregoing are the studies that have interrogated the deployment of marketing strategies in politics. Mensah (2017) provides the first foundational book on political marketing that solely focuses on Ghana. We expand on Mensah’s foundational work by interrogating political marketing practices and current trajectories by drawing on cases across the continent. Africa represents a unique political context of its own. Some countries such as South Africa are liberal democracies whilst others are military dictators, and yet others are led by civilian dictators. Others are authoritarian monarchies, while others are semi-authoritarian, or counterfeit democracies - regimes that maintain the practical pretensions of democracy (like periodic elections) and yet dissolve its substance. Yet, there is no work that has attempted to bring works focusing on the deployment of marketing strategies in politics or electoral campaigns from these various political systems scattered across the various African regions into one text and this is the intention of this book. This book seeks to bridge that gap. This is important considering the vast changes that have taken place in the field of political marketing. These include digital technologies like algorithms, filter bubbles and other digital platforms that have emerged and revolutionised political marketing. The book thus, among other things, seeks chapters that examine the deployment of marketing theory in politics and or political campaigns and the growing role and appropriation of AI technologies in political marketing in Africa.

This proposed book goes beyond existing works to interrogate the deployment of marketing insights/theory in political marketing. We seek to understand how marketing has been appropriated by politics; a process western scholars have dubbed the ‘professionalisation of politics’. The book will, among other things, interrogate: the proliferation of professional political marketing consultants in African politics; the (disruptive) nature of the advent of AI and citizen political consultants courtesy of the affordances of social and digital media technologies; the use of AI and citizen-generated political marketing campaigns. The book is also interested in submissions that deploy theory from the south to understand political marketing in the African contexts. We invite 300-500 wordsabstract submissions that focus on, but not limited to:

African Political Marketing or Political Marketing in Africa?

Product and Price in African Political Marketing

Place and Promotion in African Politics

Customer Loyalty: Does it matter in African Politics?

Political Public Relations in Africa

Political Advertising in Africa

Political Branding in Africa

Advocacy, Lobbying and Government Spinning

Public Opinion Polling in African Politics

Political Marketing and Public Diplomacy in Africa

Algorithms as a Political Marketing Tool

Opposition Research in African Politics

Muckraking and Fake News as Political Marketing Tools

Political Consultancy in African Politics

Political Marketing and Democracy in Africa

Political Marketing and Dictatorship in Africa

Permanent Campaign and African Politics

Celebrity -based political marketing in Africa.

AI and African Political Marketing

Social Media and African Political Marketing

Prospective contributors should email abstracts and short bios (topmarketinginafrica /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(pmarketinginafrica /at/ gmail.com)>before or on 30 September 2024. The bio should indicate full-name, institutional affiliation, research interests and PhD status. Notification of abstract acceptance will be done on or before 15 October 2024. And full chapter submission should be on or before January 30 January 2025.

No payment from authors will be required.

**

The book will be published by*Lexington Publishers*(a division ofRowman and Littlefield).

**

*References*

Chibuwe, A. (2013).//A//research agenda for political advertising in Africa: The case of Zimbabwe./Global Media Journal African Edition/2013 Vol. 7 (2): 116-139.

Dabula, N. (2017). The influence of political marketing using social media on trust, loyalty and voting intention of the youth of South Africa. Business & Social Science Journal, Volume 2 Issue 1, pp. 62-112.

Gbadeyan, R.A. (2011). Political Marketing Strategies and Democracy in Nigeria. Asian Journal of Business Management 3(1): 8-17.

Henneberg, S.C. (2004), Political Marketing and the Relationship Management Paradigm, University of Bath: Political Studies Association Hennenberg, S.C. (2004) Political Marketing Theory: Hendiadyoin or Oxymoron,http://www.bath.ac.uk/management/research/pdf/2004-01.pdf Accessed 05/02/2012 <http://www.bath.ac.uk/management/research/pdf/2004-01.pdf%20Accessed%2005/02/2012>.

Mensah, K. (2017). Political Marketing Management in Ghana: A New Architecture. Cham: Palgrave MacMillan.

Osuagwu, L. Political marketing: conceptualisation, dimensions and research agenda. Marketing Intelligence & Planning Vol. 26 No. 7, pp. 993-810.

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