Political branding in cities : the decline of machine politics in Bogotá, Naples, and Chicago

Author(s)

    • Pasotti, Eleonora

Bibliographic Information

Political branding in cities : the decline of machine politics in Bogotá, Naples, and Chicago

Eleonora Pasotti

(Cambridge studies in comparative politics)

Cambridge University Press, 2010

  • : hbk

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 257-274

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Branding is ubiquitous, yet its workings in politics are still untheorized. Drawing on the experiences of three cities on three continents, Eleonora Pasotti fills the gap by showing how cities suffering for decades from poor government, entrenched patronage, lack of development, and social conflict made a transition to a new form of governance: brand politics. Facilitated by the joint presence of direct elections, low party discipline, and high rates of municipal fiscal self-reliance, brand politics breaks a vicious cycle of skepticism and inertia, and opens the window for a broad set of reforms. The theory of brand politics shows mayors emulating marketing mavericks: in commerce, consumers aspire to become different people by acquiring products; in politics, citizens support mayors' brands because they seek to become carriers of the same values. Voting and buying have thus become increasingly synonymous in citizens' primal search for a means of expressing their identities.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Brands as a solution to the mobilization dilemma
  • 2. Catalysts of machine demise
  • 3. Political campaigning in the wake of the machine
  • 4. Changing public minds
  • 5. Brands and megaprojects
  • 6. Elusive representation
  • 7. Brand politics in global context.

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