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John Murray

Senior lecturer

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Corporate political activity through constituency stitching : Intertextually aligning a phantom community

Author

  • John Murray
  • Daniel Nyberg
  • Justine Rogers

Summary, in English

Corporations play an increasingly significant role in public policy and democratic politics. This article seeks to understand how corporate political activities gain political influence through intertextual strategies. The analysis is conducted on the texts produced by the Australian government in proposing a new tax as well as the texts produced by the mining industry in campaigning against the tax. We show how the government texts represent the proposed tax as a fair opportunity, while the mining industry texts represent the tax as an unfair threat. The findings attend to the processes of how the mining industry ‘stitched’ together constituencies in support of their representation. This article contributes to the existing literature on corporate political activity by showing how overt and indirect corporate activities and communications influence public policy agendas. It also contributes to critical studies of corporate political activity by theorizing how textual strategies can be used to align corporate interests in hegemonic political struggles through the creation of a phantom community. Finally, the article contributes to theories of intertextuality by developing a typology to analyse textual representation.

Publishing year

2016-11-01

Language

English

Pages

908-931

Publication/Series

Organization

Volume

23

Issue

6

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Topic

  • Business Administration

Keywords

  • Constituency building
  • corporate political activity
  • ideology
  • intertextuality
  • public policy

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1350-5084