From the Studio to the Street: Cultivating Democratic Norms in Uganda

Authors

  • Lee Shaker Associate Professor Department of Communication Portland State University
  • Paul Falzone Peripheral Vision International
  • Paul Sparks Doctoral Student Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California
  • Ruth Kugumikiriza Research Associate Peripheral Vision International, Uganda

Keywords:

soft news, democratic norms, entertainment-education, Africa, global communication

Abstract

Communication interventions can make valuable contributions to the democratic development of citizens. This article reports on a nongovernmental organization’s (NGO’s) effort to leverage a television rap news program in Uganda to strengthen viewers’ democratic norms. Two different approaches addressing government failures and malfeasance are tested with an experiment conducted in six villages outside of Kampala. Results indicate that soft news segments can influence viewers’ perceived democratic norms and shape downstream behaviors as well. Beneficial effects were strongest when participants were exposed to stories that featured relatable citizens demonstrating desirable democratic attitudes and behaviors. Treatment effects were most pronounced among less politically sophisticated participants. Results suggest that media interventions are most likely to change perceived norms when they employ messages that depict individuals modeling the desired norms. Second, results show that entertainment news can be a genre used for communication interventions that employ theoretically grounded messages. These lessons are likely both transferable to interventions in other contexts.

Author Biographies

Lee Shaker, Associate Professor Department of Communication Portland State University

Lee Shaker is an associate professor of communication at Portland State University. His primary research interest is in the intersection of new communication technologies and politics. As people increasingly learn about their communities and countries via new, emerging information sources, long established political patterns and practices are changing. Before joining the faculty at Portland State, he received his Ph.D. from the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and was a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Politics at Princeton University.

Paul Falzone, Peripheral Vision International

DirectorPeripheral Vision International

Paul Sparks, Doctoral Student Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California

Doctoral StudentAnnenberg School for Communication and JournalismUniversity of Southern California

Ruth Kugumikiriza, Research Associate Peripheral Vision International, Uganda

Research AssociatePeripheral Vision International

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Published

2019-03-28

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Section

Articles