Reynolds, Laura
(2024).
Rethinking Place Branding Governance: A Multiple Actor Study of a Medium Sized UK City, 2021.
[Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex:
UK Data Service.
10.5255/UKDA-SN-855914
The way cities, regions and nations are branded is changing. Instead of communicating images with scripted logos, slogans and taglines, there are calls for branding to centre on the perceptions and activities of the people who live, work, and invest within its boundaries. Building on these changes, my PhD research showed how different groups perceived and prioritised their city and examined the extent these groups can participate in branding activities.
A part of this fellowship involved supplementary data collection. I supplemented and strengthened my PhD findings by focusing on how multiple city actors work together to develop and coordinate branding strategies within another medium sized UK city. This covers overlaps in the place branding, placemaking and policy activities, providing an in-depth exploration of actors’ participation in the place agenda.
The research data covers the following areas:
- Multiple actors’ perceptions of the city and its identity
- Stakeholder participation in the place agenda
- Overlaps between place branding, placemaking and policy making
- Engagement and collaboration across multiple city actors
- Potential areas of agreement and disagreement across multiple city actors
- Focus on sustainability as a positioning device for cities and city actors
- Changes to cities (specifically their participatory place branding) during the Covid-19 pandemic
Participants included in this research were involved in marketing, planning, placemaking, policy making, economic development, environmental activism, community engagement, heritage protection, and the visitor economy.
Data description (abstract)
The research is a part of an ongoing programme of research looking into the involvement of local actors in the presentation and representation of their cities. This links to a growing body of research on participatory place branding that looks at how multiple actors can work independently and collectively to share and enact the narratives they assign to the city. This covers the overlaps in the place branding, placemaking and policy activities, providing an in-depth exploration of actors’ participation in the place agenda. Actors included in this research were involved in marketing, planning, placemaking, policy making, economic development, environmental activism, community engagement, heritage protection, and the visitor economy.
The funded fieldwork looked specifically at how these actors were able to collaborate on key areas of a medium-sized UK city’s place agenda. Linked to this, the research covers actors’ perceptions of the place and their interactions with each other.
Data creators: |
Creator Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Reynolds Laura |
Cardiff University |
|
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Sponsors: |
ESRC
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Grant reference: |
ES/V01109X/1
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Topic classification: |
Media, communication and language Trade, industry and markets Social stratification and groupings Society and culture
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Keywords: |
TOURISM, CITIZEN PARTICIPATION, LOCAL BROADCASTING
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Project title: |
Rethinking place branding governance: the implications of a stakeholder-orientated approach when managing the presentation of complex places
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Alternative title: |
Rethinking place branding governance
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Grant holders: |
Laura Reynolds
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Project dates: |
From | To |
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1 January 2021 | 30 March 2022 |
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Date published: |
19 Aug 2022 14:42
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Last modified: |
23 Aug 2024 16:58
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Collection period: |
Date from: | Date to: |
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1 January 2021 | 31 December 2021 |
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Geographical area: |
United Kingdom; Medium-sized city |
Country: |
United Kingdom |
Data collection method: |
The data collected is qualitative, investigating key themes and topics pertinent to the place agenda. Interview data was collected from 28 participants involved in various activities that related directly to the place agenda for the case study site. All participants were involved in leadership positions within their organisation/group. Participants were identified using purposive sampling based on their existing involvement in the city’s place agenda. Interviews were semi-structured based around key themes/topics and opening prompts. Where a topic was frequently discussed by participants, it was included and expanded upon in subsequent interviews. The interviews consist of 24 individual interviews, and two interviews that contained two participants. Interviews lasted between 50 minutes to 1 hour 25 minutes. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed per dictum. Extended segments of interview data are retained in the anonymised data included within this project, removing all data that might identify the participant, their organisation/specific activity, and the city. |
Observation unit: |
Individual, Organization, Geographic unit |
Kind of data: |
Text |
Type of data: |
Qualitative and mixed methods data |
Resource language: |
English |
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Data sourcing, processing and preparation: |
A medium-sized UK city is the focus of the case study research. Given the nature of the data, which covers actors’ engagement with the city and key individuals/groups within it, all identifiers associated with the city and the participants have been removed from the dataset. This is to protect any sensitive content and the participants’ anonymity.
The case study selection was based on the following criteria:
- A UK city
- Medium-sized (< than 1m inhabitants)
- A focus on sustainability and the green agenda
- A part of a city-region conurbation
Care has been taken to remove all identifiers for the city, the participants, as well as the organisations, individuals and specific interactions discussed. As the research explores actors’ involvement and perceptions of engagement across specific organisations/groups, large segments of text were removed where it was necessary to protect the identity of the groups and individuals within them.
The use of *** can refer to redacted word(s), paragraph(s), or cluster of paragraphs. Where larger sections of text are removed and it was deemed appropriate, a brief overview of the removed is provided.
Participants names have been replaced with pseudonyms and the transcripts have been redacted. The transcripts contain extended segments of transcribed data that relate to the key themes associated with this project.
Specific identifiers have been also removed when the participants are discussing their own personal information, education or employment.
The extended segments of remaining data are considered representative of the themes associated with this research.
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Rights owners: |
Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Reynolds Laura |
Cardiff University |
|
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Contact: |
Name | Email | Affiliation | ORCID (as URL) |
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Reynolds, Laura | reynoldsl4@cardiff.ac.uk | Cardiff University | Unspecified |
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Notes on access: |
The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
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Publisher: |
UK Data Service
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Last modified: |
23 Aug 2024 16:58
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