The Reality of Marketing in Northwest Syria: Transformations, Challenges, and Future Directions
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Abstract
This study explores the evolving role of marketing in Northwest Syria as the region transitions from humanitarian dependency toward early recovery and economic reconstruction. Drawing on qualitative, descriptive-analytical methods, the research synthesizes secondary data, comparative case studies, and grounded theory to assess how marketing practices have adapted in a post-conflict environment characterized by infrastructural fragility, economic uncertainty, and social fragmentation. The paper highlights the rise of digital platforms, the proliferation of SMEs, and the emergence of informal e-commerce ecosystems as key drivers of innovation. It also examines challenges such as data scarcity, consumer austerity, and cultural sensitivities, alongside the expansion of freelance marketing services and influencer-driven outreach. By comparing Syria’s experience with other post-conflict economies—including Bosnia, Iraq, Sudan, and Gaza—the study identifies shared patterns and context-specific adaptations. Looking ahead, it anticipates a shift toward data-driven digital marketing, sustainable branding, and regional market integration as sanctions lift and infrastructure improves. The findings underscore marketing’s potential not only as a business function, but as a catalyst for economic resilience, social trust-building, and inclusive growth in fragile settings.