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Summary - Topic Political Marketing, Campaigns and Voters (Y) UvA

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Publié le
06-08-2023
Écrit en
2022/2023

This document contains the Topic: Political Marketing, Campaigns, and Voters notes (including readings and lectures) I took. Using these materials I got an 8.2.

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Publié le
6 août 2023
Fichier mis à jour le
6 août 2023
Nombre de pages
39
Écrit en
2022/2023
Type
Resume

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Topic: Political Marketing, Campaigns
and Voters
Table of Contents
Lecture 1 – The people and its opinion................................................................................3
Lees-Marshment, J. (2001). The marriage of politics and marketing. Political Studies, 49(4), 692-
713................................................................................................................................................6
Williams, C. B. (2017). Introduction: Social media, political marketing and the 2016 US election.
Journal of Political Marketing, 16(3-4), 207-211...........................................................................9
Lecture 2: Political Marketing.............................................................................................9
Nai, A., Martínez i Coma, F., & Maier, J. (2019). Donald Trump, Populism, and the Age of
Extremes: Comparing the Personality Traits and Campaigning Styles of Trump and Other Leaders
Worldwide. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 49(3), 609-643........................................................14
Oliver, J. E., & Rahn, W. M. (2016). Rise of the Trumpenvolk: Populism in the 2016 Election. The
ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 667(1), 189-206....................15
Zulianello, M., Albertini, A., & Ceccobelli, D. (2018). A populist zeitgeist? The communication
strategies of Western and Latin American political leaders on Facebook. The International
Journal of Press/Politics, 23(4), 439-457.....................................................................................16
Lecture 3 – Trump and Populism.......................................................................................17
Haselmayer, M. (2019). Negative campaigning and its consequences: a review and a look ahead.
French Politics, 17(3), 355-372....................................................................................................19
Lau, R. R., Sigelman, L., & Rovner, I. B. (2007). The effects of negative political campaigns: A
meta-analytic reassessment. The Journal of Politics, 69(4), 1176-1209.......................................20
Roseman, I. J., Mattes, K., Redlawsk, D. P., & Katz, S. (2020). Reprehensible, Laughable: The role
of contempt in negative campaigning. American Politics Research, 48(1), 44-77........................21
Lecture 4 – Negative Campaigning...................................................................................22
Notes from Political Communication & Journalism (compulsory course)...........................25
Brader, T. (2005). Striking a responsive chord: How political ads motivate and persuade voters
by appealing to emotions. American Journal of Political Science, 49(2), 388-405........................27
Marcus, G. E. (2000). Emotions in politics. Annual Review of Political Science, 3(1), 221-250.....28
Ridout, T. N., & Searles, K. (2011). It's my campaign I'll cry if I want to: How and when
campaigns use emotional appeals. Political Psychology, 32(3), 439-458.....................................29
Lecture 5 – Emotional Campaigning.................................................................................30
Nai, A., Schemeil, Y., & Marie, J. L. (2017). Anxiety, sophistication, and resistance to persuasion:
Evidence from a quasi-experimental survey on global climate change. Political Psychology, 38(1),
137-156.......................................................................................................................................34

, Walter, A. S., & Drochon, H. (2020). Conspiracy thinking in Europe and America: A comparative
study. Political Studies, 0032321720972616...............................................................................35
Lecture 6 – Persuasion and conspiracy theories................................................................35
Lau, R. R., Andersen, D. J., & Redlawsk, D. P. (2008). An exploration of correct voting in recent
US presidential elections. American Journal of Political Science, 52(2), 395-411.........................37
Lau, R. R., & Redlawsk, D. P. (2001). Advantages and disadvantages of cognitive heuristics in
political decision making. American Journal of Political Science, 951-971...................................38
Lecture 7..........................................................................................................................39

,Relevant notes about the course:

- Written academic assignment (30%)
o Case study, visual examples, reference to course theories
o The goal of the case study is to illustrate through a specific example
a theoretical point discussed in class and/or in the weekly readings
o Outside of your comfort zone
o 900 words
o Can be from any era or a fictional example (need to ask him tho)
- Exam (70%)
o Open book
o Cite literature during
o 3-6 hours, 3000 words(ish)
- Overall grade needs to be 5.5
- Information in the syllabus is the reference
- Reflect on concrete examples  always come up with examples when you
encounter new concepts
- Always try to make connections between topics/concepts/weeks

Lecture 1 – The people and its opinion
- 2 main roles of political parties to communicate with citizens
o Political standpoint is to attract voters
 Shift votes via negative campaigning  attracting votes and
changing peoples opinion (psychological component to like
you)
o Political-sociological standpoint is to mobilize people
- Opinions = an evaluation of what someone thinks about a thing;
collections of feelings and attitudes towards something
- Monkey cage
- Positivism epistemological framework
What are opinions?

- Opinions are a key element in contemporary ‘models’ of political
behaviour
- 2 examples of conventional political behaviour
o Emotional
o Protest
- Assumption: measuring opinions allows to predict (voting) behaviour
o Opinions often translate into behaviours
o This creates a media obsession with opinions (frame that political
journalists use to describe political events)
o Political consultants are key players in helping politicians to shape
behaviours
 Opinions are central to how we think about politics
- Historically, the focus on opinions is pretty recent
o 3 models of political behaviours (try to synthesize our
understanding of opinion formation)
 Rational (economic) models
 Central element: individual preferences

,  Behaviours are driven by your preferences.
 ‘homo oeconomicus’  customer with simplified
psychology but full information
o Able to chose among alternatives
o Driven by logic
o Stable taste and preferences
o If identical circumstances identical choice
o Egotistical (no altruistic behaviours) and decide
‘rationally’
 Critique:
o This makes sense most of the time, but are our
preferences always our motivator?
o Do we have stable preferences (key assumption
of model)? Opinions change
o Does not take into account feelings (driven by
logic)
o The assumption that one person can know their
preference about everything.
 Model shows 8 sectors
 Sociological models
 40-50s
 First time from a scientific standpoint that we can see
whether an opinion changed
 Goal: to show that political propaganda works
o Results: preferences are stable in time, with
very little change from political communication
 Key factor: Individual values (brand loyalties) are
stable in time
o Socio-economic values (how your upbringing
influences you)
o Religious affiliation
o Residence (urban vs. rural)
 Urban concentration shrinks, rural
expands
 Social environment matters a lot because
its drives our values
 Critique: if preferences are stable in time, how can we
explain fluctuations in voting choices (aggregated,
individuals)?
o We need a more encompassing model, that
takes into account

 Socio-psychological models (80-90s)
 Michigan model
 Builds on the premises of the Colombia mode
(importance of stable preferences to shape behaviour)
 Adds a psychological perspective to account for short-
term fluctuations
 Focus on three behavioural dispositions
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Hi there! My name is Anna, I\'m a 20-year-old student living in Amsterdam and in my second year of studying Communication Science at the UvA. If you have any questions before buying or just want some study advice, don\'t hesitate to reach out to me and I will get back to you ASAP! :)

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