Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling

The dissertation explores the causes of party relabeling by focusing on four party systems: South Korea, France, Taiwan and the United States. The existing literature on political parties considers one of their primary functions to be providing a brand name. As a result, party name change has been v...

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Main Author: Kim, Mi-son
Other Authors: Osborn, Tracy L., 1975-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1863
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5920&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-59202019-10-13T04:27:58Z Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling Kim, Mi-son The dissertation explores the causes of party relabeling by focusing on four party systems: South Korea, France, Taiwan and the United States. The existing literature on political parties considers one of their primary functions to be providing a brand name. As a result, party name change has been viewed as an anomaly caused by internal and external shocks that disturb the status quo equilibrium or a phenomenon symptomatic of unstable, weakly institutionalized party systems. However, party name changes are not as rare as assumed in the existing literature. Therefore, my dissertation addresses the following questions: When and why do parties change names? What are the characteristics of a party system that hamper the development of brand-name party labels? I theorize that the combination of the following three factors increases the likelihood of party relabeling: (1) prominence of personalistic party cues, (2) strong levels of political attention in the electorate, and (3) high degree of governmental centralization. These three factors encourage vote-, office-seeking motivations in the party so greatly that the party is willing to do whatever it takes to win including such a radical strategy as relabeling. In order to test the proposed theory, I closely examine South Korea and France, where parties commonly replace their labels, in comparison to Taiwan and the United States whose parties do not change labels, respectively. These four cases are chosen because they allows cross-case and within-case analysis that is crucial for a comparative case study to gain internal and external validity. I utilize various types of data – both qualitative and quantitative in investigating these cases. My dissertation will contribute to a broad range of literatures in party politics as well as in East Asian politics. By providing a new theoretical model on this understudied phenomenon, I contribute to a better understanding of the role of party labels and initiate more active discussion over party strategy and party branding. Furthermore, by examining Korean and Taiwanese parties in depth, my dissertation provides a systematic analysis on the studies of East Asian politics. 2015-07-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1863 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5920&context=etd Copyright 2015 Mi-son Kim Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaOsborn, Tracy L., 1975- publicabstract Party Rebranding Party Relabeling Party Strategy Political Parties Political Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic publicabstract
Party Rebranding
Party Relabeling
Party Strategy
Political Parties
Political Science
spellingShingle publicabstract
Party Rebranding
Party Relabeling
Party Strategy
Political Parties
Political Science
Kim, Mi-son
Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
description The dissertation explores the causes of party relabeling by focusing on four party systems: South Korea, France, Taiwan and the United States. The existing literature on political parties considers one of their primary functions to be providing a brand name. As a result, party name change has been viewed as an anomaly caused by internal and external shocks that disturb the status quo equilibrium or a phenomenon symptomatic of unstable, weakly institutionalized party systems. However, party name changes are not as rare as assumed in the existing literature. Therefore, my dissertation addresses the following questions: When and why do parties change names? What are the characteristics of a party system that hamper the development of brand-name party labels? I theorize that the combination of the following three factors increases the likelihood of party relabeling: (1) prominence of personalistic party cues, (2) strong levels of political attention in the electorate, and (3) high degree of governmental centralization. These three factors encourage vote-, office-seeking motivations in the party so greatly that the party is willing to do whatever it takes to win including such a radical strategy as relabeling. In order to test the proposed theory, I closely examine South Korea and France, where parties commonly replace their labels, in comparison to Taiwan and the United States whose parties do not change labels, respectively. These four cases are chosen because they allows cross-case and within-case analysis that is crucial for a comparative case study to gain internal and external validity. I utilize various types of data – both qualitative and quantitative in investigating these cases. My dissertation will contribute to a broad range of literatures in party politics as well as in East Asian politics. By providing a new theoretical model on this understudied phenomenon, I contribute to a better understanding of the role of party labels and initiate more active discussion over party strategy and party branding. Furthermore, by examining Korean and Taiwanese parties in depth, my dissertation provides a systematic analysis on the studies of East Asian politics.
author2 Osborn, Tracy L., 1975-
author_facet Osborn, Tracy L., 1975-
Kim, Mi-son
author Kim, Mi-son
author_sort Kim, Mi-son
title Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
title_short Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
title_full Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
title_fullStr Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
title_full_unstemmed Parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
title_sort parties without brand names: the causes and consequences of party relabeling
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1863
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5920&context=etd
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