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Completed RESEARCH GRANT UKRI Gateway to Research

Local Perceptions and Media Representations of Election Observation in Africa

£5.98M GBP

Funder Economic and Social Research Council
Recipient Organization University of Edinburgh
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Mar 01, 2021
End Date Feb 29, 2024
Duration 1,095 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID ES/T015624/1
Grant Description

During several recent elections in Africa - most noticeably in Kenya's 2017 polls - questions have been raised about the competency and partiality of observation missions, and about the future of observation both on the continent and elsewhere. Despite observers having had some successes in detecting and deterring certain types of electoral fraud, and having played a central role in helping to spread basic election technologies across Africa, these recent criticisms pose a significant risk to the credibility of observer groups.

This project is timely as it will improve understandings, for both academics and practitioners, of election observation in two areas: Firstly, it will investigate local perceptions on a range of issues relating to election observation missions. Despite the fact that citizens in the countries that host election observation missions are one of election observation's major intended beneficiaries, their views are generally overlooked in the academic literature.

In addressing this gap, the project will develop understandings of how people in host countries evaluate the goals, performance, and methods of both international and domestic election observation initiatives. The findings will be of particular interest to observer groups, as local perceptions are central to the question of the credibility of election observers - and ultimately their ability to do their work effectively.

They will also have a broader importance as they will allow for the views of non-elite Africans to be better represented in academic and policy debates on the topic of election observation, which are currently dominated by European and North American perspectives. Secondly, this project will investigate how information produced by, and relating to, election observation missions circulates via traditional and social media, as well as the ways in which it can be distorted through this process.

It will consider the impact that disinformation and the actions of politicians have on election observation in the current political climate. The academic literature has, to date, also paid little attention to this topic despite the fact that, during recent elections, observation missions and their statements have often been misrepresented across various forms of media.

For the purposes of this project, three country case studies have been selected; we will conduct research both before and after the national elections in Tanzania, Zambia and Gambia. The project will use a mixed methodology with a qualitative approach supplemented by a survey element designed to support our findings with some quantitative data. The primary research methods will be a combination of focus groups, group interviews and semi-structured interviews with non-elite citizens.

This approach is designed to solicit local perceptions on election observation and to investigate how people obtain information about observation missions. We will also conduct more targeted interviews with key informants, such as journalists and politicians, to better understand how information circulates. The project will also monitor traditional and social media coverage of election observation.

The project findings will be shared with election observation practitioners through evidence-based policy recommendations. These will suggest ways to improve communication strategies during future election observation missions, and how to better align the practices of election observers with the preferences of the citizens in the host countries. This will have the long-term effect of improving confidence in the observation missions, making it easier for them to achieve their objectives.

Recommendations will also be shared with journalists and editors working for traditional media. They will detail how misrepresentations and misunderstandings in reporting on observation missions can be reduced. If the quality of information that citizens get on their elections improves, then they too will benefit.

All Grantees

University of Edinburgh

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