Towards a Theory of Marketing Systems as the Public Good
© The Author(s) 2018. The Marketing-Systems-as-the-Public-Good framework proposed in this article outlines the general principles of interpreting change in marketing systems. The framework advances a view of purposeful temporal change based on collective practices that a) identify, develop and maintain key common resources; b) initiate public-private asset transitions; c) facilitate contributory participation of market actors in marketing system processes; and d) perpetuate attenuating mechanisms. These processes construct the system as the public good with non-excludable and non-subtractable (dis)benefits. The drive for further change arises when the system’s overarching structures infuse value creation practices with macromotive-based meaningfulness (e.g. the justice motive) which differentially resonates in market actors’ lived experiences, who through ongoing localized socio-political discourses and contestation undertake to correct perceived justice digressions. The case of the historical evolution of the Uzbek Bozor Marketing System illustrates the key elements of the proposed framework.
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Kadirov, D. (2018). Towards a Theory of Marketing Systems as the Public Good. Journal of Macromarketing, 38(3), 278-297. https://doi.org/10.1177/0276146718767949Publisher DOI
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Journal of MacromarketingVolume
38Issue
3Publication date
2018-04-16Pagination
278-297Publisher
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ArticleOnline publication date
2018-04-16ISSN
0276-1467eISSN
1552-6534Language
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marketing systemsmacromotivethe justice motivepublic goodmarket inclusivenesspublic-private good transitioncontributory participationmarketing-system governancemarket designattenuating mechanismsSocial SciencesBusinessBusiness & EconomicsPERSPECTIVEMARKETPLACETRAGEDYJUSTICECOMMONSWORLDMarketingOther EducationHistorical StudiesMarketing Theory
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