Political Advertising
Introduction
Issues, Opportunities & Challenges Across the Globe, Special issue of the International Journal of Advertising; Deadline 15 Feb 2025
INTEREST CATEGORY: MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
POSTING TYPE: Calls: Journals
Posted by: Chang-Dae Ham
Call for Papers – International Journal of Advertising
Political Advertising: Issues, Opportunities & Challenges Across the Globe
Submission Window:
- Deadline for submissions – Feb 15, 2025
- First review letters complete – July 15, 2025
- Revision deadline – Oct 15, 2025
- Second review deadline Jan 15, 2026
- Any final minor revisions as asked for by editors Feb 15, 2026
2024 is a Super Election Year – with national elections in more than 60 countries, including those with large populations (India, Indonesia, Mexico, United States). More than 2 billion people (about 25% of the world population) are heading to the polls (Bucholz, 2024). At the same time, record-level advertising spending could mean new ways to reach voters with information to help them make decisions. However, the potential for technology to positively or negatively impact targeting, messaging, and dissemination through Generative AI –leads to new research questions, new ethical and regulatory challenges, and new considerations for efficacy. There is also opportunity to better understand traditional and new forms of political advertising and message persuasion, to understand audience perceptions of political advertising, and to investigate the ways in which audience characteristics or political affiliations relate to advertising effects and efficacy.
Despite calls for research on political advertising nearly 15 years ago (Taylor, 2010) and a review with research directions in 2015 (Van Steenburg 2015), there remains ample opportunity for scholars across fields (e.g., advertising, communication, marketing, media studies, political science) and around the world to contribute their expertise to the political context. There is some evidence that people may not know much about political advertising or the way that it is regulated (e.g., Haley 2020; Nelson et al. 2021) and may question targeted or mistargeted ads, especially on social media (e.g., Binder et al. 2022; Hirsch et al. 2023). There is also concern over gender stereotypes in political advertising (Lee 2014), the way that algorithms classify and target people (Cotter et al. 2021) and suggestion that the narrative style of political advertising may relate to efficacy (McLaughlin et al. 2019). Yet, we don’t fully know how or if (or why) political advertising works in the contemporary landscape or around the world.
This special issue calls for papers on political advertising. We encourage a wide range of topics and issues – across methods (qualitative, quantitative, empirical, historical, theoretical, computational, case study, etc.)– for this special issue on political advertising. Comparative studies across countries or studies within a singular cultural context are welcome.
Research topics may address (but are not limited to):
- Misinformation, disinformation, and deep fakes in political messages
- Social media and political advertising
- Local geotargeting
- AI and political advertising
- Big data and targeting political advertising
- Local vs. National political advertising
- Efficacy in political advertising
- Classic political advertising campaigns
- Communication patterns in political advertising
- Political persuasion knowledge, interest, and behaviors in advertising campaign
- Social issues in political advertising campaigns
- Political engagement and disengagement among voters and advertising
- Political parties and advertising
- Segmentation and targeting in political advertising
- Gender and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in political advertising
- Ethics and Regulation in Political Advertising
- Message Content and Effects (Narrative, Valence, Emotions, Image, etc.)
- Measuring effects of political advertising
- Interpretations of political advertising
- Issues with negative political advertising
- News, media and political advertising
Submission deadline: February 15, 2025
Special Issue Guest Editors
- Eric Haley, Professor, University of Tennessee, Knoxville haley@utk.edu
- Michelle R. Nelson, Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign nelsonmr@illinois.edu
- Chang-Dae Ham, Associate Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Cdham317@illinois.edu
Weblink: Political Advertising: Issues, Opportunities & Challenges Across the Globe ()
References: available upon request due to space limitation. Contact the guest editors.