TY - UNPB
T1 - A Model of Protests, Revolution, and Information
AU - Barberà Sàndez, Salvador
AU - Jackson, Matthew O.
N1 - We thank Ernesto Dal Bo and Santiago Oliveros for very helpful discussions and suggestions. We also thank Daron Acemoglu, Avi Acharya, Dan Bernhardt, Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, Raphael Boleslavsky, Steve Callendar, Ying Chen, Georgy Egerov, Jon Eguia, Hulya Eraslan, Navid Hassanpour, Navin Kartik, D´aniel Pass, Arturas Rozenas, Mehdi Shadmehr, Scott Tyson, participants of various seminars and conferences, and a co-editor and referees for helpful comments.
PY - 2019/10
Y1 - 2019/10
N2 - A collective action or revolt succeeds only if sufficiently many people participate. We study how potential revolutionaries' ability to coordinate is affected by what they learn from different sources. We first examine how people learn about the likelihood of a revolution's success by talking to those around themselves, which can either work in favor or against the success of an uprising, depending on the prior beliefs of the agents, the homogeneity of preferences in the population, and the number of contacts. We extend the analysis by examining the effects of homophily on learning: people are more likely to meet others who have similar preferences, undercutting learning. We introduce variants of our model to discuss other ways of learning about the support for a revolution. We discuss why holding mass protests before a revolt provides more informative signals of people's willingness to actively participate than other less costly forms of communication (e.g., via social media). We also show how outcomes of revolutions in one region can inform citizens of another region and thus trigger (or discourage) neighboring revolutions. We also discuss the role of governments in avoiding revolutions and learning about their citizens' concerns; in particular, by observing the strength of protests and counter-protests.
AB - A collective action or revolt succeeds only if sufficiently many people participate. We study how potential revolutionaries' ability to coordinate is affected by what they learn from different sources. We first examine how people learn about the likelihood of a revolution's success by talking to those around themselves, which can either work in favor or against the success of an uprising, depending on the prior beliefs of the agents, the homogeneity of preferences in the population, and the number of contacts. We extend the analysis by examining the effects of homophily on learning: people are more likely to meet others who have similar preferences, undercutting learning. We introduce variants of our model to discuss other ways of learning about the support for a revolution. We discuss why holding mass protests before a revolt provides more informative signals of people's willingness to actively participate than other less costly forms of communication (e.g., via social media). We also show how outcomes of revolutions in one region can inform citizens of another region and thus trigger (or discourage) neighboring revolutions. We also discuss the role of governments in avoiding revolutions and learning about their citizens' concerns; in particular, by observing the strength of protests and counter-protests.
KW - revolution
KW - demonstration
KW - protests
KW - strikes
KW - Arab Spring
U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.2732864
DO - 10.2139/ssrn.2732864
M3 - Working paper
T3 - SSRN
BT - A Model of Protests, Revolution, and Information
ER -