Liberation Technology: Mobile Phones and Political Mobilization in Africa

Institute of Economics

Date: 9 April 2019 / 12:15 - 13:15

Aula 408, Università della Svizzera italiana

Can digital information and communication technology (ICT) foster mass political mobilization?

We use a novel geo-referenced dataset for the entire

African continent between 1998 and 2012 on the coverage of mobile phone signal together with geo-referenced data from multiple sources on the occurrence of protests and on individual participation in protests to bring this argument to empirical scrutiny. We find that mobile phones are instrumental to mass mobilization but this only happens during economic downturns, when reasons

for grievance emerge and the cost of participation falls. The results are in line with insights from a network model with imperfect information and strategic complementarities in protest occurrence. Mobile phones make individuals more responsive to both changes in economic conditions - a mechanism that we ascribe to enhanced information - and to their neighbors’ participation – a mechanism that we ascribe to enhanced coordination. Empirically both effects are at play, highlightning the channels through which digital ICT can alleviate the collective action problem.

The paper is joined work with Andrea Tesei

 Marco Manacorda

Queen Mary University of London