Life After Reform


Book Description

Life After Reform is the first serious and dispassionate book about how politics will change under the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act. It will quickly be seen as an essential tool for understanding the 2004 election. But its sophisticated and original framework for understanding change will also make it important well beyond a specific election, and long after reform debates have shifted to new questions. Visit our website for sample chapters!




Prince John Magruder


Book Description

His life and campaigns.










The Campaign of His Life


Book Description

Dalton Thompson, the 45th President of the United States appeared to be coasting to an easy reelection victory against a feeble opponent, when suddenly a global pandemic, an economic collapse, a tragic death of a high school basketball star, and an adversarial media stood in his way.




Powerhouse Marketing Plans


Book Description

Annotation The best product doesn't always sell. Powerhouse Marketing Plans identifies the traits that drive sales and reveals the actual marketing plans of leading companies. Marketing and business professionals will learn about focus groups, surveys, and demographic and trade research, and discover what has worked (and what hasn't) for the likes of Energizer and Philips.




The Life and Campaigns of the Black Prince


Book Description

The Life and Campaigns of the Black Prince is an invaluable collection of contemporary source material, seen through the eyes of the men involved.




Tangled Goods


Book Description

A novel investigation of pro bono marketing and the relationship between goods, exploring the complex moral dimensions of philanthropic advertising. The advertising industry may seem like one of the most craven manifestations of capitalism, turning consumption into a virtue. In Tangled Goods, authors Iddo Tavory, Sonia Prelat, and Shelly Ronen consider an important dimension of the advertising industry that appears to depart from the industry’s consumerist foundations: pro bono ad campaigns. Why is an industry known for biting cynicism and cutthroat competition also an industry in which people dedicate time and effort to “doing good”? Interviewing over seventy advertising professionals and managers, the authors trace the complicated meanings of the good in these pro bono projects. Doing something altruistic, they show, often helps employees feel more at ease working for big pharma or corporate banks. Often these projects afford them greater creative leeway than they normally have, as well as the potential for greater recognition. While the authors uncover different motivations behind pro bono work, they are more interested in considering how various notions of the good shift, with different motivations and benefits rising to the surface at different moments. This book sheds new light on how goodness and prestige interact with personal and altruistic motivations to produce value for individuals and institutions and produces a novel theory of the relationship among goods: one of the most fraught questions in sociological theory.