TY - JOUR
T1 - Deference, dissent, and dispute resolution
T2 - An experimental intervention using mass media to change norms and behavior in Rwanda
AU - Paluck, Elizabeth Levy
AU - Green, Donald P.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the indispensable research assistance of Albert Nzamukwereka and the team of 21 Rwandan researchers, in particular, Willy Kamanzi and Virgile Uzabumugabo. We thank LaBenevolencija, in particular, Johan Deflander, Suzanne Fisher, Laurie Pearlman, Ervin Staub, and George Weiss. John Bullock, Desha Girod, Devra C. Moehler, Christopher Muller, Jeremy Weinstein, Pedro Vicente, the CISAC seminar at Stanford, and the Harvard Civil Conflict Seminar provided valuable comments. We thank Pamela Lamonaca, Peter Aronow, and Celia Paris for their assistance in preparing the manuscript. This research was supported by the John Enders Fund, a Yale Center for the Study of Globalization Research Grant, the John Perry Miller Fund Prize, a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship to Elizabeth Levy Paluck, LaBenevolencija, and the Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale University.
PY - 2009/11
Y1 - 2009/11
N2 - Deference and dissent strike a delicate balance in any polity. Insufficient deference to authority may incapacitate government, whereas too much may allow leaders to orchestrate mass violence. Although cross-national and cross-temporal variation in deference to authority and willingness to express dissent has long been studied in political science, rarely have scholars studied programs designed to change these aspects of political culture. This study, situated in post-genocide Rwanda, reports a qualitative and quantitative assessment of one such attempt, a radio program aimed at discouraging blind obedience and reliance on direction from authorities and promoting independent thought and collective action in problem solving. Over the course of one year, this radio program or a comparable program dealing with HIV was randomly presented to pairs of communities, including communities of genocide survivors, Twa people, and imprisoned gnocidaires. Changes in individual attitudes, perceived community norms, and deliberative behaviors were assessed using closed-ended interviews, focus group discussions, role-play exercises, and unobtrusive measures of collective decision making. Although the radio program had little effect on many kinds of beliefs and attitudes, it had a substantial impact on listeners' willingness to express dissent and the ways they resolved communal problems.
AB - Deference and dissent strike a delicate balance in any polity. Insufficient deference to authority may incapacitate government, whereas too much may allow leaders to orchestrate mass violence. Although cross-national and cross-temporal variation in deference to authority and willingness to express dissent has long been studied in political science, rarely have scholars studied programs designed to change these aspects of political culture. This study, situated in post-genocide Rwanda, reports a qualitative and quantitative assessment of one such attempt, a radio program aimed at discouraging blind obedience and reliance on direction from authorities and promoting independent thought and collective action in problem solving. Over the course of one year, this radio program or a comparable program dealing with HIV was randomly presented to pairs of communities, including communities of genocide survivors, Twa people, and imprisoned gnocidaires. Changes in individual attitudes, perceived community norms, and deliberative behaviors were assessed using closed-ended interviews, focus group discussions, role-play exercises, and unobtrusive measures of collective decision making. Although the radio program had little effect on many kinds of beliefs and attitudes, it had a substantial impact on listeners' willingness to express dissent and the ways they resolved communal problems.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0003055409990128
DO - 10.1017/S0003055409990128
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:73949152892
SN - 0003-0554
VL - 103
SP - 622
EP - 644
JO - American Political Science Review
JF - American Political Science Review
IS - 4
ER -