Political Marketing in Morocco: From Theories to Stereotypes, Definition and Comparison

Authors

  • Hajar Makry ENCG, Hassan First University
  • Houcine Berbou ENCG, Hassan First University
  • Badia Oulhadj ENCG, Hassan First University

Abstract

At a time when Moroccan researchers still undecided on the appropriate definition of Political Marketing, the debate around this subject is initiated already, whether on their side the opinion makers, the media and the politicians themselves. Among supporters and opponents of the adoption and the use of this discipline's strategies, each one according to his own definition of Political Marketing, few months before 2016's elections in Morocco, the debate around this emerging science, is growing increasingly. Through an exploratory survey, we tried to highlight the common perception in analytical comparison, with what was overdraft, until today by international research. The purpose is an essay of definition adapted to the needs of this particular Moroccan context. Considering that rare are the academic researches that has been initiated in Morocco, around the concept, this paper is an analysis of the gap, among common perception, and scientific conceptual framework of this discipline. Keywords: Marketing, Political Marketing in Morocco, Political actors.JEL Classifications: M31, D83, M10DOI: https://doi.org/10.32479/irmm.8110

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Hajar Makry, ENCG, Hassan First University

Dr. Hajar MAKRYDepartment of Management and Marketing (LRMC)ENCG Settat 

Houcine Berbou, ENCG, Hassan First University

Prof. Dr. Houcine BerbouDepartment of Management and Marketing, Head of LRMC

Badia Oulhadj, ENCG, Hassan First University

Prof. Dr. Houcine BerbouDepartment of Political Science, Head of LASMO

Downloads

Published

2019-07-18

How to Cite

Makry, H., Berbou, H., & Oulhadj, B. (2019). Political Marketing in Morocco: From Theories to Stereotypes, Definition and Comparison. International Review of Management and Marketing, 9(4), 80–86. Retrieved from https://econjournals.com./index.php/irmm/article/view/8110

Issue

Section

Articles
Views
  • Abstract 242
  • PDF 268