Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique

During the 2009 Mozambican elections a randomized controlled trial implemented a voter education campaign. My thesis analyses the peer effects triggered by that campaign. The first essay looks at peer effects within the household. The second essay (co-authored with Marcel Fafchamps and Pedro Vicente...

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Main Author: Vaz, Ana
Other Authors: Fafchamps, Marcel ; Alkire, Sabina
Published: University of Oxford 2016
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.690138
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6901382017-12-24T15:53:24ZInterpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from MozambiqueVaz, AnaFafchamps, Marcel ; Alkire, Sabina2016During the 2009 Mozambican elections a randomized controlled trial implemented a voter education campaign. My thesis analyses the peer effects triggered by that campaign. The first essay looks at peer effects within the household. The second essay (co-authored with Marcel Fafchamps and Pedro Vicente) focuses on peer effects at the village level. The campaign targeted heads of household or their spouse (i.e., the primary target). In the first essay (Chapter 2) I test the effect of the campaign on other household members. I interpret this effect as evidence of interpersonal influence exerted by the primary target over other household members. The main finding of this analysis is that the transmission of voter education campaign’s effects tends to occur through sharing of opinions and social pressure, instead of information sharing. In this essay I also explore the determinants of interpersonal influence within the household. I test whether the effect of the campaign on other household members (i.e., secondary targets) varies with age, gender and education. I find a stronger effect on younger secondary targets, consistent with the idea that they are more susceptible to social pressure. The second essay (Chapter 3) examines whether the campaign’s effect is transmitted within the village through social networks (kinship and chatting) and geographical proximity. We test whether the impact of the campaign on targeted and untargeted individuals depends on proximity to other targeted individuals in the village. Our main finding is that the campaign increases voter participation on average, but much less so among individuals who are socially or geographically closer to other targeted individuals. This result is interpreted as evidence of free-riding on voting as a civic duty.324.9679University of Oxfordhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.690138http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:855b1ad0-e77b-4c02-99be-49ce88d50a81Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 324.9679
spellingShingle 324.9679
Vaz, Ana
Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
description During the 2009 Mozambican elections a randomized controlled trial implemented a voter education campaign. My thesis analyses the peer effects triggered by that campaign. The first essay looks at peer effects within the household. The second essay (co-authored with Marcel Fafchamps and Pedro Vicente) focuses on peer effects at the village level. The campaign targeted heads of household or their spouse (i.e., the primary target). In the first essay (Chapter 2) I test the effect of the campaign on other household members. I interpret this effect as evidence of interpersonal influence exerted by the primary target over other household members. The main finding of this analysis is that the transmission of voter education campaign’s effects tends to occur through sharing of opinions and social pressure, instead of information sharing. In this essay I also explore the determinants of interpersonal influence within the household. I test whether the effect of the campaign on other household members (i.e., secondary targets) varies with age, gender and education. I find a stronger effect on younger secondary targets, consistent with the idea that they are more susceptible to social pressure. The second essay (Chapter 3) examines whether the campaign’s effect is transmitted within the village through social networks (kinship and chatting) and geographical proximity. We test whether the impact of the campaign on targeted and untargeted individuals depends on proximity to other targeted individuals in the village. Our main finding is that the campaign increases voter participation on average, but much less so among individuals who are socially or geographically closer to other targeted individuals. This result is interpreted as evidence of free-riding on voting as a civic duty.
author2 Fafchamps, Marcel ; Alkire, Sabina
author_facet Fafchamps, Marcel ; Alkire, Sabina
Vaz, Ana
author Vaz, Ana
author_sort Vaz, Ana
title Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
title_short Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
title_full Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
title_fullStr Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
title_full_unstemmed Interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from Mozambique
title_sort interpersonal influence and network effects on voting behavior : experimental evidence from mozambique
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.690138
work_keys_str_mv AT vazana interpersonalinfluenceandnetworkeffectsonvotingbehaviorexperimentalevidencefrommozambique
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